In the basic food chain, autotrophs are the organisms that do not receive energy from a plant or animal. Autotrophs make their own food and energy.
the transfer of energy from one organism to oter organisms is called foodchain. liyaeugene
Relies on sun+water+soil if there is none of this there will be incomplete transfer
A dead organism has a dead body that can be decomposed by bacteria and myces that enrich the soil and are part of the food chain.
It basically gets transferred from plant, to animal, and so on. Example: A caterpillar eats a leaf. It gets eaten by a spider, who in turn gets eaten by a bird. The bird gets eaten by a fox, and the fox will eventually die. The decomposer (what ever it or they might be. Like a maggot.) breaks down the fox's carcase which then gives nutrients into the ground. Then, plants can use the nutrients to grow. The cycle then starts over again.
decomposers
protozoa
the transfer of energy from one organism to oter organisms is called foodchain. liyaeugene
The food chain connects all the energy of animals to the greatest to the least and the food web still shows all the energy and they both contains nature,water,soil,air,weather,and plants
A producer as in a plant or a resource. Examples are: grass, flowers, soil, sun, light, exc. There are many different things in a food chain- primary consumers, secondary consumers, tertiary consumers and then decomposers. But producers are definitely at the bottom or the base of a food chain
Relies on sun+water+soil if there is none of this there will be incomplete transfer
A dead organism has a dead body that can be decomposed by bacteria and myces that enrich the soil and are part of the food chain.
It is recycled: it either returns to the soil as compost, or forms the energy source for creatures further up the food chain.
Autotrophs, they dont make energy but they extract it from the soil and atmosphere.
food ,water,air, soil ,
a soil-plant barrier may protect it...
It basically gets transferred from plant, to animal, and so on. Example: A caterpillar eats a leaf. It gets eaten by a spider, who in turn gets eaten by a bird. The bird gets eaten by a fox, and the fox will eventually die. The decomposer (what ever it or they might be. Like a maggot.) breaks down the fox's carcase which then gives nutrients into the ground. Then, plants can use the nutrients to grow. The cycle then starts over again.
decomposers