It goes from light energy from the sun to chemical energy to chemical, mechanical, and heat energy and the chemical energy can go to mechanical and heat energy. Then the remaining chemical energy goes to chemical, heat, and mechanical energy again and it keeps on repeating.
Food Chains get energy from the producers in that specific food chain. The producers, such as grass, make enery using the sun, that is passed on through the food chain.
a food chain would be like this egale gets the snake gets the mouse gets the cricket gets the grass the grass reproduceses thats a food chain an example of one it can be a food chain of anything
one food chain that includes the marsh grass is the Grasshopper ---> Shrew ---> and the Marsh Hawk
The bottom of the food chain is always an Autotroph or an organism that can make its own food, either through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis. This includes plants algae which are then eaten by the animals that are the next step up in the food chain.
Energy is already in the form of a monomer and it is hand picked and put into grass which is part of the food chain, so there u have it.
Yes, what is the eastern cottontail rabbit food chain
yahh reed sweet grass is a producer. it makes food for animals from sunlight!! :)
a process of eating and eaten by is known as food chain, that is an animal eating its prey and also eaten by other animal. grass--------- grass hopper-----------frog--------snake an interconnected food chain is known as food web
Theanwer is hawk to snake to mouse to grass
The Lion food Chain consists of, the sun grass, wildebeest and ends with the lion.
An example of a food chain starting with the sun is: Sun (producer) -> Grass (primary producer) -> Rabbit (herbivore) -> Fox (carnivore). In this chain, the sun provides energy for the grass to grow, which is then consumed by the rabbit, and subsequently, the fox preys on the rabbit. This demonstrates how energy from the sun flows through each level of the food chain.
the food chain for a chip. is grass-->chipmunk-->snake--> hawks