Environmental Sciences, asked by swaddmasteeh3901, 1 year ago

Explain nothing ever goes wastes in a forest

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Answered by Abhips125
4
A forest is an ecosystem where there is a cross-linked interaction among species through food webs and genetics. That is why nothing goes waste. Example: Plants absorb solar energy and rainwater from ground and produces food. This food is eaten by primary, then secondary and tertiary consumers. When they die, they are decomposed by bacteria in soil which makes it fertile. When plants die, they too are decomposed by bacteria in soil and the seeds produced by them fall in the soil giving rise to another plant. In the same way, the offspring of parent animals grow and this entire process is repeated again and again. Therefore, nothing goes waste in a forest.
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