No, a forest fire does not allow new plants to grow since when a forest fire breaks out, the effects can be terrible. Wildlife is destroyed and driven out by the flames and heat. After the forest fire, the forest appears completely different. The plants and trees have now turned into charcoal, smoke and ash. We have to wait for centuries for the new plants to grow and replace the old forest.
When it comes to the environment's health, they aren't. But some people think that they need to clear the land in order to build things, so in that case, in some peoples' perspective, they can be good.
Soil humus and sunlight
no they do not because the nutrients in the forest are different and plants still grow & the nutrients we have at home are different
Trees.
Forest fires are helpful in succession by clearing out older vegetation, making way for new growth and allowing for the regeneration of certain plant species that are adapted to fire. Fires can also release nutrients stored in vegetation, which can enrich the soil and promote the growth of new plant life. Additionally, some tree species require heat from fires to promote seed germination.
When it comes to the environment's health, they aren't. But some people think that they need to clear the land in order to build things, so in that case, in some peoples' perspective, they can be good.
Pioneer Species. Mosses are bryophytes and are often considered a "pioneer species" that will establish itself first in a forest that has been cleared by a forest fire. Ferns and other vascular plants are the "fuel" of the fires and burn out. Then when the forest begins to grow again, the non-vascular plants like the mosses (bryophytes) will grow first.
Few plants grow tall on the forest floor because there is a lack of sunlight.
The dead material has been burned away therefore providing more room to grow and some plants depend on the effects of fire in order to survive
well the forest grows itself because it rains which makes it grow like plants grow when they have been watered so the trees and plants all grow and spread that a forest grows
They grow quickly or grow in other plants's tracks
saprophytic plants
plants such as the lilly pad ect.
through secondary succesion
Moss, Saplings, small amounts of grass or weeds, ect.
Honeysuckle likes to grow in a moist, shady area.
flying pigs