Plants breathe in carbon dioxide and breathe out oxygen; animals breathe in oxygen & breathe out carbon dioxide.
It's plants and animals.
All animals are part of one or more food chains and the food chain starts with plants. Many of the very smallest animals eat plants, but most larger animals eat other animals. The bigger animals eat smaller ones. That is the chain. And that makes the smallest animals most important because they cause the chain to progress.
The answer is that you have to shove the snake into the frog and stuff the marsh wren and cut it up into a chain and it makes a food chain of animals
plants makes there food by themselves but animals do not
what makes it unique is its imperitive animals and mavericks in there.dont ask no more plz.
Chlorophyll is the substance that makes plants so unique. It allows photosynthesis to occur inside plant cells.
Plants are usually at the bottom of the food chain. The thing at the bottom of the food chain has to be able to make its own food, if it ate anything it would no longer be at the bottom of the food chain. Plants make their own food from carbon dioxide, water and sunlight in a process called photosynthesis. i agree and would just like to add the sun isn't the bottem of the food chain
The colour of the sand, the trees and that it has unique animals
Every planet is unique and important in one way or another. I guess what makes our plannet special is that it meets all the environmental requirements for life to manifest itself in the form of plants and animals.
Nitrogen fixation is important because it converts atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can use to grow and thrive. This makes nitrogen available to animals through the consumption of plants that have been able to utilize fixed nitrogen. Ultimately, nitrogen fixation helps sustain the food chain and ecosystem health.
Animals' dung make fertilizer for the plants, enriching the soil. Animals eat plants. Animals trod on plants. Animals consume pesky insects that bother plants. Animals consume not-so pesky instects that help plants. Animals pluck plants and wave them around. Animals rub their rears in plants to mark their territory. Animals' dead bodies make fertilizer, which makes it a tad less disgusting than dung fertilizer. Animals affect the plants in many ways, fundamentally.
Animals eat meat or plants for energy and plants go through process called Photosynthesis which makes sugar for the plant to eat.