A near impossible occurrence, if all plants did die or were eaten it would mean near-certain extinction of all complex organisms.
They get burnt down and die.
It would die and dry up and lose its colour.
The plant will die - as it will not be able to make enough food from the limited leaf area.
we all die
Plants that are unlucky enough to loose all of their chlorophyll will not be able to produce glucose through photosynthesis and will die. This is happens if the entire plant looses chlorophyll; there are other examples of plants (such as white variegated ones) where only certain portions of the leaf have no chlorophyll, in these instances the food is produced and distributed from the areas that do contain chlorophyll to those which don't.
We all die, because they produce oxygen!!
All your plants die and you have to dig them up All your plants die and you have to dig them up
If all the plants in the world die, then we could'nt breath, because no oxygen would be produced
you could maybe die from it
It will not die .
They sink to the bottom and gets eaten by scavengers.
When there are too many plants, some of them are crowded out their neighbors and die. This happens all the time anyway; things die, and new things grow in their places. There cannot actually be "too many" plants.
Phosphates are returned to the water when plants and animals die.
They die.
They will die
they die
It's body either decomposes or is eaten by omnivores.