Vulture then they find it and eat it
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Decomposers reintroduce a dead animal into an ecosystem by creating fuel for plants. The dead animal decomposes and creates nutrients for plant growth.
Fossils are depositions of dead animal imprints and/or bones. When an animal or plant dies, its skin rots away, leaving behind the bone or imprint.
Generally Human Cheek cells (as with skin cells) are dead on the outermost layers, and still alive on the deeper layers. So the cheek cells are dead even before you take them out of your mouth.
When an animal eats a dead animal, it helps recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem. This process helps maintain the balance of nutrients in the environment and provides food for scavengers and decomposers. Additionally, it helps prevent the spread of diseases by removing carcasses.
Because part of their natural diet is carrion (dead animals). They find the carcasses by using their sense of smell - and will 'home in' on an animal from some distance away.
No. The Dead Sea is thousands of miles away.
When approaching a downed animal that appears to be dead, one should wait a short distance away from the animal and see if the eyes blink.
No. Relief is granted from obstructions in bunkers but not loose impediments. A dead animal would be considered a loose impediment. Play away and hope it is not your neighbors cat.
When a predator attacks and/or they sense danger, then they play dead, and most animals don't eat a dead animal that they didn't kill.
Buzzards eat any dead, decaying animal. They will eat anything that is decaying, they can smell dead animals from far away, and will circle around the dead animal and eat it. They also hang around landfills and eat decaying food.
It is 2,080 miles according to Google Maps.
They can easily smell a whale carcass 20 miles away or seals up to 6' beneath the snow and ice. This will depend on whether the animal is dead, which way the wind is going, if it is under the ice, if the polar bear can smell well, etc.
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Just pick up the dead kitten and get it out of there! A dead animal can cause harm to the rest of the litter and the mother cat.
They can easily smell a whale carcass 20 miles away or seals up to 6' beneath the snow and ice. This will depend on whether the animal is dead, which way the wind is going, if it is under the ice, if the polar bear can smell well, etc.
No, there is no reason to attack a dead animal. They will eat a dead animal though.