yes there is two types of decomposers. there are more then two the two that i know are decomposers and scavengers
2
5
There are many decomposers that live in the Mediterranean sea. Monk seal and the loggerhead sea turtles are the common decomposers in the Mediterranean.
Decomposers are important because they break up waste and dead material.
yes, because say a fox dies because it was hit by a car.its just lying there with its guts hanging out and a fly comes along.the fly starts eating it and becomes a decomposer. is a fly a living thing? yes.
Sea decomposers break down organic material in the ocean. These sea decomposers include crabs, sea urchins, shrimp, and seaweed.
producers are plants that make food for themselves by photosynthesis and decomposers convert organic matter into inorganic materials.
This is not true. Decomposers, also called autotrophs, are common in nature. Many, many fungi, archaebacteria, Protista and eubacteria are decomposers.
The decomposers would run out of food (for them) to decompose.
Too many of them, earthworms and rest
If there were too many decomposers in the world, the decomposers would begin to die. Too many or too few decomposers would harm the food chain.
Many types of decomposers live in the water. The most common are marine worms, starfish, sea urchins, bacteria, fungi, and underwater macro decomposers.
Yes, there are many ocean decomposers including benthic worms and bacteria.