Discover nature this week with Missouri's natural decomposers.
Recycling is critical in our “throwaway society” -- and the same is also true in nature.
Living things play one of three roles in their environments:
- Green plants are producers, trapping the sun’s energy in food.
- Most animals are consumers (like water fleas, snails, tadpoles, and beavers found in pond ecosystems) meaning they eat the food provided by green plants.
- And the third role -- and one most overlooked -- is that of the decomposers, or “nature’s recycling centers.”
When plants and animals leave waste behind or die, bacteria, fungi and insects clean it up. These special organisms are called decomposers, which eat dead plants and animals. Their main role is to digest and break down dead organisms into tiny nutrients which are then returned to the soil.
Billions of these organisms live in the top layer of the soil. Fungi and bacteria begin to break down leaves even before they fall.
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Photo Credit: gettyimages-zms
Categories: Missouri, General