It would collapse and everything would die
there would be a lot of herbivores and eventually all the herbivores would have eaten most of the grass and some would start dying
If one element of a food chain is eliminated, it can disrupt the entire ecosystem. For example, if a primary producer like a plant species disappears, the herbivores that rely on it for food would decline, leading to a decrease in carnivores that feed on those herbivores. This imbalance can cause a cascading effect, resulting in the collapse of the food chain, as each level is interconnected and dependent on the others for survival. Ultimately, the ecosystem may struggle to maintain its stability and biodiversity.
If one element of the food chain, such as a primary producer or a key predator, were to be eliminated due to disease or habitat loss, it could disrupt the entire ecosystem. For instance, the loss of a primary producer like a plant species would reduce food availability for herbivores, leading to a decline in their populations. This, in turn, would affect the predators that rely on those herbivores for food, potentially causing a cascade of population declines throughout the food chain. Ultimately, such disruptions can lead to decreased biodiversity and altered ecosystem dynamics.
Herbivores would be forced to range wider.
Then there would be less grass and food available for other deer and herbivores.
It is carried to your large intestine and is then eliminated.
the producers would decrease in population as the herbivores which the sharks would have ate, would grow in population.
Herbivores compete with other herbivores for the limited food and water available in a desert.
they would just die
Lions feed on mostly herbivores, which includes zebras. Herbivores eat plants, and if there were no more plants, herbivores would starve to death, which would cause lions to turn to other animals for food. They might all die from lack of water before then, though.
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.