Consumers mainly obtain energy from the food that they eat. This means that their source of energy will be from the producers.
The energy in the producers comes from the sun. It feeds the consumers. The decomposers ultimately release the energy from the consumers and the producers that were not consumed.
producers obtain energy from water and sunlight, consumers obtain energy from producers and decomposers obtain energy from comsumers.
Producers and consumers exchange energy and matter in various ways. The producers are used as food for the consumers and the consumers are used as fertilizer and food for producers when they die.
I would say they are consumers because they can't do photosynthesis. Producers produce energy through the sun while consumers use the energy producers make. A producer may be grass and a consumer may be a deer.
Producers capture energy and stores it in food. Consumers get their energy by eating other organisms. Decomposers decomposes the consumers, producers and waste materials to products that are again useful for producers. Thus, consumers do not actually have a role, while producers and decomposers do.
By eating producers or other consumers.
THey obtain energy by eating consumers and producers.
Producers (plants) make their own food, consumers don't. Consumers have to eat producers or other consumers.
Ecosystems flow from producers to consumers. Producers, such as plants, convert energy from the sun into organic compounds, which are then consumed by primary consumers (herbivores). This energy flow continues through the food chain to higher-level consumers.
you tell me im not sure
A food web diagram can be used to show the population of producers, primary consumers, and secondary consumers in a system. This diagram displays the various feeding relationships in an ecosystem, illustrating how energy flows from producers to consumers.
No, producers, such as plants, which make the energy, do, as you should know, energy "burns" when transfered, so some of it "dissapears" No, producers, such as plants, which make the energy, do, as you should know, energy "burns" when transfered, so some of it "dissapears"