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Producers are organisms that produce their own food and energy. In most ecosystems these are usually just plants. Some plants like the Venus fly trap are not producers because they consume bugs, which are other organisms.
Consumers are organisms that eat other organisms to obtain food and energy. These are usually animals that eat plants or other animals.
Decomposers are organisms that break down animals remains and waste to gain energy. These are usually bacteria and fungi.
So, we can make the following list.
Producers: Wild grasses, alpine plants, fallen trees, (these are all plants)
Consumers: Mountain goat, eagle, hare (these all eat other organisms)
Decomposers: Lichens, mosses (these are decomposers).
Mosses could be a producer but they have the unique capability of breaking down organic matter, so it seemed for fitting to put them in the decomposer category.
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Answer:
The strength of the sun can cause droughts and dry land. Water can cause weathering and erosion (breaking away at land) snow can cause avalanches to break things and land rain can cause floods and and also can cause weathering to break away and make land smaller
The data are qualitative because they don't measure or count anything
In the altitudinal zonation of the equatorial mountain areas of Latin America, the zone between 3,000 to 6,500 feet (1,000 to 2,000 m) with warm temperate conditions and deciduous forest is the tierra templada.
What is the meaning of tierra templada?
a region or zone of temperate climate especially : tropical land of usually from 2000 to 6000 foot elevation in which the temperature is modified by the elevation.
What vegetation is in the tierra templada?
Tierra templada (temperate land) is the area between 900 and 1800 m (3000 to 6000 ft) where mean annual temperatures are usually between about 18°C and 25°C (64°F to 77°F). The natural vegetation in these zones is temperate forest, such as oak and pine-oak forest.
Learn more about tierra templada:
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When caused by humans, acid rain is most commonly a byproduct of intense air pollution. As pollutants are pumped into the atmosphere, the particles rise up to the point where water can condense around them thereby forming water vapor and rain drops; however, those rain drops are closely intertwined with the pollutants thereby giving them an acidic nature.