producers
Grass that gains energy from the sun is an example of a producer in the food chain, specifically an autotroph that undergoes photosynthesis to convert sunlight into energy.
Yes, as Indian grass gains energy from the sun and herbivores eat it, Indian grass falls under the category of producer.
Grass takes energy from the sun through photosynthesis. Therefore, the sun provides energy for grass.
An example of a food chain with a human would be: grass (producer) -> cow (primary consumer) -> human (secondary consumer). In this chain, the human consumes the meat of the cow as a source of energy and nutrients.
Here's an example. It all starts with some grass. Grass goes performs photosynthesis, and grows. A bunny or small animal comes along and eats the grass, receiving sunlight energy as well. When the coyote eats the bunny, it receive energy from the grass, bunny, and Sun.
The grass gets it's energy from the sun and then the rabbit eats the grass.
The sun.
The Sun.
It's a biology question, and it means that only 10% of the energy in the trophic level before it is gained by the current consumer, the rest is lost as heat and various other by-products.Example:Food Chain: Sun -> Grass -> Antelope -> LionIn this example, the grass absorbs the energy of the sun and starts the 'energy chain'. When the antelope eats the grass, it will only receive 10% of the ORIGINAL energy from the sun, the rest is given off as heat and such to the environment. When the lion eats the antelope, it will only receive 10% of the energy that the antelope received from the grass, which would then be only 1% of the ORIGINAL energy from the sun.
To do this simply you need to trace back the food source of an animal. For example: lion eats deer, deer eats grass, grass uses sun's energy to produce food via photosynthesis.
Grass contains carbon which was taken out of the atmosphere by photosynthesis using the Sun's energy. The grass can be burned to recover the energy as heat.
Yes, grass is a type of plant that undergoes photosynthesis, a process where sunlight is absorbed by the plant's chlorophyll to produce energy for growth and metabolism. This is how grass absorbs energy from the sun.