Yes, rotten apples are considered matter. They occupy space and have mass.
One rotten apple releases ethylene gas, which speeds up the ripening process of surrounding apples and causes them to spoil faster. This spoiling process then spreads as the other apples become contaminated with mold and bacteria from the rotten apple.
A fallen rotten tree is considered a biotic factor because it was once living and is now decomposing, contributing organic matter to the ecosystem. Biotic factors are living or once-living components of an ecosystem, whereas abiotic factors are non-living components like temperature and sunlight.
Yes, apples are good for composting because they are rich in nutrients and break down easily, adding valuable organic matter to the compost pile.
Yes, paper is considered matter because it has mass and occupies space. It is made up of molecules and atoms, which are the building blocks of all matter.
A bee is considered a matter because it is a physical object composed of atoms and molecules.
There is "small choice in rotten apples" because all the apples are rotten and, therefore, you will have a rotten apple no matter which one you pick.
All organic matter eventually disintegrates.
All organic matter eventually disintegrates.
Rotten Apples was created in 1991.
Don't feed horses rotten apples
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Yes. 'Matter' is anything that takes up space and has mass. A rotten apple has mass and takes up space, therefore it is matter. If you meant something different with your question, you should revise your use of English grammar.
The cast of Rotten Apples - 2007 includes: David Kilgo as Johnny
Yes
That's a trick question, isn`t it? The things that live in rotten apples probably can, or at least they react to vibrations ...
i think in the middle is where apples rot first
Apples on a plate.