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A squirrel eating a nut is an example of a primary consumer gaining energy. A caterpillar eating a plant
foxes need energy because they are fat foxes need energy because they are fat
AnswerBecause the prey has already used the energy, or because the consumer has not eaten or cannot digest all of the prey. The engery is also lost when the animal has eaten something and after disgesting it will come out as "poo." look on this website for more:http://www.uwsp.edu/cnr/WCEE/keep/Mod1/Flow/foodchains.htm
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The plants use the sunlight, the mice eat the plants, the hawks eat the mice. 'Tis the circle of life.
Rabbits use up energy by running/hopping around and jumping up and down.
They both move by hopping.
Kangoroo
Bunnies use there stronger hind legs to propel themselves both forward and up this motion is generally called hopping
rejects on what the food or the hopping then take them to the vet to have them get checked
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If you're asking for an example, then an example could be a wolf eating a rabbit. It has taken the energy from the rabbit, which the rabbit had gotten the energy from the plants it had been eating. The plants got their energy from the sunlight, using it to make glucose.
You could make a pen and pop it on the lawn. Your rabbit will quite happily munch away on the grass, whilst hopping about.
No, autotrophs produce their own energy through photo- or chemosynthesis. A rabbit must receive its energy from another organism (i.e. a plant) and therefore cannot be an autotroph.
The muscle in there thy gives them enough power to hop.
A squirrel eating a nut is an example of a primary consumer gaining energy. A caterpillar eating a plant
A rabbit eats grass, and a hawk eats a rabbit. This is called a food chain or a food web. A rabbit is an herbivore. A rabbit eats plants to obtain energy. The hawk doesn't eat plants. The hawk eats the rabbit, and when an animal eats another animal to obtain energy, the consumer of the animal is called a carnivore. This is also an example of predation.