Chemical energy stored in food is transferred along the food chain as organisms consume one another. When organisms break down food for energy, they release that chemical energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which is used for various cellular processes such as growth, reproduction, and movement. This transfer of chemical energy from one organism to another ultimately sustains the entire food chain.
That's what the battery does.
Water itself is not a form of chemical energy, but it is often involved in chemical reactions that produce or store energy. Water can be part of processes like photosynthesis or combustion where chemical energy is converted into other forms.
The chemical element carbon (C) is stored in both food and fossil fuels. In food, carbon is part of carbohydrates, proteins, and fats. In fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas, carbon is stored in the form of hydrocarbons.
Chemical energy is a form of potential energy stored in the bonds of chemical compounds. When chemical reactions occur, this energy is released or absorbed. It is the energy that holds atoms together in molecules and is important for various biological processes and industrial applications.
The inner membrane of the mitochondria, specifically the folds called cristae, are important for converting chemical energy from food into a usable form of energy called ATP through a process called oxidative phosphorylation. This is where the majority of ATP production occurs in the mitochondria.
Producers, such as plants, are the organisms in a food chain that add energy to every part of the chain. They do this through the process of photosynthesis, where they convert sunlight into energy that can be used by other organisms in the food chain.
In a food chain, producers, primarily plants and some algae, absorb the sun's light and heat through the process of photosynthesis. They convert sunlight into chemical energy, which forms the foundation of the food chain. This energy is then transferred to primary consumers and subsequent levels of the food chain as organisms consume one another.
the sun
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.
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it is a food chain that is on land for example lollies are part of the land food chain but fish aren't part of the land food chain they are part of the aquatic food chain.
The part of the food chain that needs the most energy to live is the... All of the species on the bottom, because if their on the bottom they are small, so they need more energy to run and hide.
A Komodo dragon is a predator at the top of its food chain, so it is not considered a food chain in itself. A food chain is a linear flow of energy from one organism to another, showing the transfer of nutrients through various levels of a community. The Komodo dragon would be a part of a food chain as a predator preying on various lower-level organisms for its food.
The food chain is the process by which sunlight energy is captured by plants (producers) which make food. Plants are then eaten by herbivores (primary consumers)n which are in turn eaten by carnivores (secondary consumers). Man is an animal and part of this food chain, if we destroy the food chain we will die.
basically consumers are ones who eat and gain energy from the lower part of the food chain ...
they are to be at the top mof their food chain.
Second level of the food chain.