No, a bean plant is not a decomposer. Decomposers are organisms like bacteria and fungi that break down dead organic matter, while bean plants are producers that use sunlight to produce their own energy through photosynthesis.
No, Spanish moss is not a decomposer. It is an epiphytic plant that absorbs nutrients and moisture from the air and rain. Decomposers are organisms that break down dead organic matter into simpler compounds.
A blueberry is a producer because it is a plant that produces its own food through photosynthesis. It is not a consumer or decomposer in the typical sense.
The Amazon Rainforest is known as the luxuriant ecosystem that is home to half of the world's animal and plant species.
Biomass would be higher in a rainforest due to the abundant plant life and vegetation that thrives in the moist environment, leading to a greater accumulation of organic matter. Deserts, on the other hand, have low biomass levels due to the scarcity of water and limited plant growth.
A decomposer in the Rainforest is a fungus type organism, such as mushrooms or moss.
A decomposer can add nutrients to itself and also to the soil around a plant for the plant to use.
The decomposer is generally last in the list that includes the plant, the predator, and the prey along with the decomposer. The decomposer actually removes remaining tissue and plant parts from the area and returns it to the soil.
It may be oldest vascular rainforest plant
Producer.
A decomposer eats waste and dead matter, also dead animals.
No, a bean plant is not a decomposer. Decomposers are organisms like bacteria and fungi that break down dead organic matter, while bean plants are producers that use sunlight to produce their own energy through photosynthesis.
Plants are producers.
The epiphyte
Rubiaceae
a decomposer
it is cletha it is a decomposer beacuase it can be use to help any type of plant grow