Many animals have been filmed using rocks and sticks as tools. One of the most common ways an animal breaks apart hard bits of food or a hard shell is by using a rock as a hammer. Often times they find another rock to place the hard food on and hit with a smaller rock. They seem to have learned what size and kind of rocks to use.
Chew it or by digestion...
It uses its sharp teeth and tears it into bits that it can eat.
The job of the digestive system is to break your food down,physically and chemically using the good bits I.E vitamins,carbs and stuff to help your body and excrete the bits it doesn't need.
no they do not chew there food when they catch a large animal such as a buffulo deer or monkey they rip it apart and swallow the peices and when they catch a small animal such as a pig duck or baby chicken the swallow it whole without ripping it apart
They eat their food by ripping the animal with their mouth holding it tightly in its mouth causing the animal to tare apart so the Komodo Dragons can eat it.
Lysosomes pour enzymes into the vacuole to break apart (digest) the chains of glycogen into glucose.
The job of the digestive system is to break your food down,physically and chemically using the good bits I.E vitamins,carbs and stuff to help your body and excrete the bits it doesn't need.
They pump water over their gills and filter out small bits of animal and plant plankton for food. They filter more food particles than they can consume.
yes, a simple example is the microrganisums in our mouth, they break down bits of food and produce acid as a by product.
Enzymes can only BREAK DOWN things. Whether its food, chemicals, etc. The point of enzymses are TO break things down.
lowering the ph
Food is like legos, when you eat it the food is shaped for the animal or plant it came from. When you digest food your taking apart the "legos" and rebuilding to match the jobs your body will use them for.