all animals need energy from food to maintain homeostasis..
mitochondrion
Chloroplast
chloroplast
Energy is lost as it moves up the food chain due to various processes like metabolism, heat production, and waste production. Each trophic level utilizes some of the energy from the level below it for its own needs, resulting in only a small percentage of energy transferring to higher levels of the food pyramid.
An organism that uses energy to produce its own food supply from inorganic compounds is called an autotroph (within a food chain, it is a producer).
Animal locomotion uses a great deal of energy and food is used as fuel.
an organism that gets energy from eating other organisms. an organisms that uses sunlight to make its own food. an organism that gets energy from eating dead organisms, non-living
the answer is a pyramid that uses the energy of the sun to make food for a plant
sloth
The animal using the energy uses 90% of it and stores 10% of it, then when a animal (or anything else) eats it, it gets the 10% and uses 90% of the 10% and stores 10% of the 10%. That's also why plants are healthy for you. (Because you get more energy then meat or something else)
because every animal uses up some of the energy it gets . . . so the energy gets halved every time the energy gets passed on.
No. The rabbit only uses a fraction of of the energy. As a general rule of thumb, 90% of the energy in an animal's food goes to waste.
from the food it eats. it uses the energy to move
dolphin
The organelle that captures energy from sunlight and uses it to produce food for the cell is called a chloroplast.
To do this simply you need to trace back the food source of an animal. For example: lion eats deer, deer eats grass, grass uses sun's energy to produce food via photosynthesis.
Mitochondria