Environmental Sciences, asked by bhumikhokhani1612, 1 year ago

How does a dead organic matter disappear from our environment?

Answers

Answered by peru7or10
0
Eventually, all living things die. And except in very rare cases, all of those dead things will rot. But that’s not the end of it. What rots will wind up becoming part of something else.

This is how nature recycles. Just as death marks the end of an old life, the decay and decomposition that soon follow provide material for new life.

“Decomposition breaks apart dead bodies,” explains Anne Pringle. She’s a biologist at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass.

When any organism dies, fungi and bacteria get to work breaking it down. Put another way, they decompose things. (It’s the mirror image of composing, where something is created.) Some decomposers live in leaves or hang out in the guts of dead animals. These fungi and bacteria act like built-in destructors.
Answered by topanswers
3

The correct answer for your question is Decomposition.

Decomposition of organic matter is the most essential and rapid process that involves micro organism in the soil.

The process of decomposition of organic matter by micro organisms are mostly driven by some favorable conditions.

They are

Properties of soil

Plant nutrients in the soil.

Micro Organisms in the soil.

Basic plant nutrient cycle.

The process also involves the physical and chemical properties of the soil.

Some of the microorganism that are responsible for the decaying process of organic matter in the soil are mentioned below.

Fungi

Algae

Protozoa

Bacteria

Actimycetes

Read more in brainly:https://brainly.in/question/6357248

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