Corn--->mouse--->hawk. However, the bacteria would be interested in decomposing dead corn, dead mice and dead hawk. So there would be an arrow (----->) back to the soil that the corn will grow in.
No, corn could be said to have potential energy due to it's position or constituents.
Digestive enzymes are enzymes that break down food into usable energy. The digestive enzyme that breaks down corn is called xylanese. Humans lack this enzyme.
Corn is actually a grass and is a monocotyledonous plant. The corn kernals are the seeds of the plant.
starch (roots, corn etc), sugars, oils, esters, cellulose.
the things that make blue corn blue are pigment and selenium
Directly, none, unless it is sleeping in sunlight during the day. However, indirectly, it receives all its energy from the sun. The mouse that it eats got energy from the corn it ate. The corn got its energy from the sun (photosynthesis).
yes
Corn eats: nothing microorgansim eats: everything dead caterpillar eats: corn mouse eats: corn, caterpillar deer eats: corn crow eats: corn, caterpillar (maybe snake, not sure) squirrel eats: corn cougar eats: mouse, deer, crow, squirrel, snake snake eats: squirrel, mouse
Yes. Happily.
In corn.
corn and wheat
Using corn for energy is an example of biomass.
rub corn syrop on it
corn is at the bottom which is the producer, then the mouse and cricket eat the corn, cat and snake eat the mouse, blubird eats the cricket, and the hawk is at the top of the foodchain and the hawk eats the bluebird, snake, and the cat
An adult Corn Snake will eat a good sized mouse once a week.
Corn plants store energy (glucose) in their thick stems.
No, corn could be said to have potential energy due to it's position or constituents.