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When a plant dries up, why do we call it dead and not non-living?
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When they fall off and become dry, they are considered as dead or non living as they cannot now perform the important functions like respiration, growth, response to stimulus etc. Dried leaves are considered as dead because they have dead cells.
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- If a plant dries up, it is known as dead and not non-living because Living creatures are organisms that are eligible for growth, reproduction, metabolism, etc.
- When leaves fall off trees, they dry up and ultimately disappear likewise dried plant also disappears.
- Dead plants are not living stuff. They don't possess cells, and therefore can not accomplish significant cellular purposes.
- When plants die, they become nutritious for decomposers like bacteria, fungi and earthworms. Decomposers recycle dead plants and animals into chemical nutrients like carbon and nitrogen that are published back into the soil, air and water.
- Decomposition is the initial phase in the recycling of nutrients that have been borrowed by an organism plant to assemble its body. It is the procedure whereby the deceased tissues break down and are restored into easier organic configurations.
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