It is secreted out in the form of feces.
That depends. During an organism's life, it can basically go anywhere, unless it's completely sessile (can't move). When an organism dies, the body is broken down into the chemicals it is comprised of (such as carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur) and used to provide energy for some other organism.
The first thing I thought of was by eating it. We know this because energy cannot be created or destroyed - so where does the energy of the devoured organism go? Into the system of the organism that devoured it.
how this energy source of the sun is used The sun has energy already stored in it and it basically it lets it go; don't forget solar panels too!
Basically only 1/10 of the energy from the previous organism is absorbed into the body of the consumer while the other 9/10 is burned up when used for energy by the previous organism. If there is some grass with 100 energy and it gets eaten by a herbivore, the herbivore only receives 10% of the ORIGINAL energy (so the herbivore will have 10 energy.) The animal that will eat the herbivore will only receive 1 energy from the ORIGINAL energy source. The next consumer of the previous organism will only get 0.1 energy from the ORIGINAL energy source and so on.
An organism that absorbs food is a producer/plant. A producer absorbs energy from the sun to make food or go through Photosynthesis
It is used and then it is gone.
if u eat it then it goes into your body but idk where it goes other than that. lol
When most cells take in oxygen, it goes into the mitochondria where it is used to produce energy in a process called cellular respiration.
Most radiant energy is absorbed by Earth. The rest is reflected and bounces back and forth between Earth's surface and the clouds until absorbed.
Solar energy is the most expensive energy. Every year the cost of energy go's up. Source: www.jc-solarhomes.com/solar_energy_facts.htm
An energy pyramid is shaped like a pyramid because it represents the flow of energy through an ecosystem, with energy decreasing at each trophic level as it is transferred from one organism to another. The pyramid shape illustrates the decrease in available energy as you move up the food chain, with primary producers at the base having the most energy, followed by herbivores, then carnivores.
After energy has been used, the energy transforms to another type of energy. This energy is obviously not usable. This useless energy then collects in the sky to form more useful energies.