Plants produce oxygen, so the oxygen would get used up and everything which breathes oxygen would suffocate.
Plants provide nutrition and energy, so everything which eats plants would starve, then the things which eat the things which eat plants would starve.
Eventually, the only things alive on the planet would be the bacteria and other one-celled organisms which do not depend on plants to survive.
If all the plants in an ecosystem died, it would disrupt the entire food chain. Herbivores, which rely on plants for food, would struggle to find nourishment, leading to starvation. Carnivores that prey on herbivores would also be affected due to a lack of food availability. This imbalance could result in a mass die-off of many organisms in the ecosystem.
If all plants died, humans would be severely affected due to the loss of oxygen production and the collapse of food systems. Plants are crucial for photosynthesis, which generates the oxygen we breathe and absorbs carbon dioxide. Additionally, the extinction of plants would lead to the collapse of ecosystems, disrupting food chains and eliminating sources of nutrition for humans and other animals. This would ultimately result in widespread famine and ecological disaster, making survival extremely difficult.
same as everything, it would die!!!! same as everything, it would die!!!!
it will definitely affect the humans and all human settlements. Rather all the elements in the ecological chain has has its impact on each other. Take an example, if all lions dies, what will happen? the vegetarian wild life will grow at a speedy rate endangering the existence of forests and later may move to cultivations made by humans destroying it and making humans suffer for want of food. trees in the same line, if gets exhausted, will impact on human settlement in-terms of low rains, soil erosion, fast degradation of underground water streams etc. There's no limit to what can happen to human. All your imagination in this regard will happen to humans if all trees died.
Naturally, nothing would happen. But if humans continued ot pollute without saving the environment, then they would end up ruining it and destroying the environment and causing significant amounts of pollution.
we would die, too
The snake would soon die. Snakes are part of the web of life. They eat smaller creatures that eat plants and would die if all the plants died.
Plants would have died and if plants died, the carbon-dioxcide might go into the air and animals and people will die.Also plants are made up of food so if plants were to die people would have no food and die from hunger.
They would die too, for various reasons, as plants have many impacts on the environment to make it habitable for other life, and of course they are food sources.
Plants that have died can be composted and returned to the soil as a mulch.
Then the things that eat green plants would die, and so would the things that eat them. This would continue forever until there was nothing left alive on earth. There's a nice thought :)
They died.
Some 80 million Mexicans would starve to death, as they depend on wheat, rice and corn crops to stay alive.
All life one Earth depends on plants for survival as only plants can make their own food. If plants died off, most other life on earth would die off as well.
If all the hummingbirds in the world died, then probably most flowers and a few other plants would die because that would be one less animal to help the flowers reproduce and populate
If all the plants in an ecosystem died, it would disrupt the entire food chain. Herbivores, which rely on plants for food, would struggle to find nourishment, leading to starvation. Carnivores that prey on herbivores would also be affected due to a lack of food availability. This imbalance could result in a mass die-off of many organisms in the ecosystem.
Since dinosaurs died out, terrestrial fauna that was once reptile based has been replaced by a wide variety of mammals. Also, flowering plants are the dominant flora.