eaither producer's carnivores herbivores or scavenger's
yes because energy pyramid is made up of three things. Those things are producers, herbivores, carnivores. It is at the top of the pyramid because the pyramid has an order to follow. It looks something like this: carnivore herbivore producer It can't go any other way.
The energy pyramid shows how the amount of useful energy, food, decreases as organisms in that level use it. Even though a lot of energy may be taken in at any level, more energy in the form of food that is available to the next level, is stored on the bottom level and decreases at each level as you move to the top of the pyramid. Thus, there is much less energy to support organisms at the top, so there are fewer in most communities.
Non-examples of an energy pyramid include diagrams that do not represent the flow of energy through trophic levels, such as a simple bar graph of species populations or a chart showing unrelated environmental factors. Additionally, any structure that illustrates energy distribution without a clear hierarchy, like a random assortment of organisms without indicating producers, consumers, and decomposers, would not qualify as an energy pyramid. Lastly, a representation that inaccurately depicts the energy transfer (e.g., showing equal energy levels for all trophic levels) also serves as a non-example.
Any mass of living cells that shares the same genetic code base, and which function together in a system is considered an organism. Yes, it is an eukaryote(cells contain a nucleus), autotroph (makes its own food), and is vascular(a more complicated plant). Not only animals can be organisms. And organism is really any living thing. It has systems, needs energy to grow, and grows and develops. Yes, a tree is an organism.
Start with a square, then extend each corner upwards to meet at a point above the center of the square. The point can be almost any height, so the pyramid can have an infinite number of shapes.
Depends on the pyramid. A pyramid with a square (or quadrilateral) base would indeed have 8 edges, but a pyramid can have any other polygon as a base.Depends on the pyramid. A pyramid with a square (or quadrilateral) base would indeed have 8 edges, but a pyramid can have any other polygon as a base.Depends on the pyramid. A pyramid with a square (or quadrilateral) base would indeed have 8 edges, but a pyramid can have any other polygon as a base.Depends on the pyramid. A pyramid with a square (or quadrilateral) base would indeed have 8 edges, but a pyramid can have any other polygon as a base.
No, the base of a pyramid must be a 2-dimensional shape so no polyhedron can be its base.
The base of any pyramid is simply one side!
No. A polyhedron is a three dimensional body. The base of a pyramid is a two dimensional figure.But any non self-intersecting polygon can be the base of a pyramid.
It is any polygonal shape.
It is any polygonal shape.
It is any polygonal shape.
The volume for any pyramid = 1/3*base area*perpendicular height
Volume of a pyramid = 1/3*base area*height
There are four triangular faces, of which any one can be a base at any instant.
'Pyramid Energy' has never been banned or restricted in any format.
The height of the pyramid is not give in any meaningful way.