Sunlight, carbon dioxide, water, chlorophyll.
Is an organism that uses sunlight to make its own food for energy
Producer
An organism that can make its own food is known as an autotroph. Autotrophs use energy from sunlight (photosynthesis) or inorganic chemicals (chemosynthesis) to produce their own food, typically in the form of glucose. Plants, algae, and some bacteria are examples of autotrophs.
Plants are able to make their own food through a process called photosynthesis, where they use sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water to produce glucose. This ability to produce their own food is known as autotrophy.
An organism that makes its own food is called an autotroph. Autotrophs use sunlight (photosynthesis) or inorganic molecules (chemosynthesis) to produce their own energy. Plants, algae, and some bacteria are examples of autotrophs.
Producers use about 90 percent of the food energy they make during photosynthesis for their life processes.
Producers use about 90 percent of the food energy they make during photosynthesis for their life processes.
Plants are an organism capable of producing their own food. (Organisms are all living things, technically plants are living...) Plants create their own food through photosynthesis.
A heterotroph is an organism that cannot produce its own food. Humans, as well as all other animals are consumers, because they have to eat other animals or plants for energy. Fungi and bacteria are also heterotroph, because they feed on decomposing matter (they use this matter as food to produce energy).
They use photosynthesis to make their own food.
People & animals are called consumers because their bodies don't make their own food; unlike plants who use photosynthesis to make their own food. So we call plants 'producers'.Producers- an organism that creates it's own foodconsumers- are organisms that can't create their own food, so have to consume other organisms.
The part of cells that plants use to make their own food are chloroplasts.