photosynthesis
Organisms that use sunlight directly to make sugar are called autotrophs. They are able to convert light energy into chemical energy through the process of photosynthesis. Examples include plants, algae, and some bacteria.
An organism that uses sunlight to make sugar from water and carbon dioxide is a plant. Through the process of photosynthesis, plants convert sunlight into energy that is used to synthesize glucose from water and carbon dioxide.
sunlight
-because mitochondria make energy. -they use sugar and oxyen to make energy in the process called cellular respiration. -fermination make energy using sugar for animals. -and photosynthes make energy using water,carbon dioxiode, and sunlight using chloroplast.
Plants use a process called photosynthesis to make energy from sunlight. During photosynthesis, plants absorb sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water to produce glucose (sugar) and oxygen. This process takes place in the chloroplasts of plant cells, where sunlight is converted into chemical energy.
Chloroplast. It is an organelle found in plant cells that is responsible for photosynthesis, the process of converting sunlight into energy in the form of sugar.
chloroplast
Chloroplast
Organisms that make their own food with sunlight or chemical energy are called autotrophs.
Plants use a pigment called chlorophyll in their chloroplasts to trap sunlight energy through the process of photosynthesis. This energy is then used to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose, a form of sugar that plants can use for energy and growth.
They trap the energy in Sunlight using the green pigments in their leaves in the process called "photosynthesis". This process makes sugar and they store the food a polymers of sugar.
Organisms that make their own food with sunlight or chemical energy are called autotrophs.