Yes, nitrogen exists in the food chain, primarily as a vital nutrient for plants. It is absorbed from the soil in the form of nitrates and ammonium, which plants then utilize to synthesize amino acids and proteins. Herbivores consume these plants, incorporating nitrogen into their bodies, and subsequently, carnivores obtain nitrogen by eating herbivores. This cyclical process highlights nitrogen's essential role in supporting life across different trophic levels.
Nitrogen enters the food chain through nitrogen-fixing bacteria which convert atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can absorb. Plants then take up this nitrogen through their roots and incorporate it into their tissues. When herbivores eat these plants, they obtain the nitrogen, and it continues up the food chain when carnivores eat the herbivores.
primary consumer
Herbivores are at the bottom of the food chain, if they did not exist carnivores would have nothing to eat and they would cease to exist, as would everyone else above them on the food chain
No where it does not exist. The Legen....dary Pink Dolphin does not exist.
Through ingestion. Plants associate with thingies that live in the soil and give them nitrogen, that nitrogen goes up the food chain.
If the produce is removed then the food chain will cease to exist. The consumers will then have nothing to eat and so will die.
nitrogen cycle helps man in the balancing of relation between animals and plants and food chain
grass and plants
If they didn't exist the animals they eat would overpopulate.
some horses get SLAGHTERD BY HUMUNS!!!!!! STOP HORSE SLAGHTER
yup. nitrogen gas-- N2
No, Trophic level is the level it is in in the food chain depending on its habitat.