The Victoria water lily grows in the Amazon rainforest of South America, and it is edible. However, the only edible part of the plant is its seeds, which can be harvested and eaten like popcorn. These can be eaten by people around the globe.
Buttercup plants do not eat food in the traditional sense like animals. They obtain nutrients through photosynthesis, which is a process where they use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to produce food for themselves.
Plants (or at least most plants; there are some exceptions) do not eat any other organism; they create their own food out of water, air, minerals and sunlight. Whereas, all animals have to eat some other organism to survive. Some eat plants and some eat other animals, but every animal eats some kind of organism. So plants produce the food upon which all animals ultimately depend (because even if an animal eats other animals, the animals that it eats depend upon plants).
Plants produce oxygen during photosynthesis, using sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose. They also produce fruits, which contain seeds for reproduction and dispersion.
Because Autotrophs make their own food by performing photosynthesis. Hetotrophs get their food by living off and on other organisms.
because it dont need one to produce its water and food
Consumers
Because plants produce their food with the sun. And everything eats plants, in someway. (A tiger eats a zebra who eats grass who get their food because the sun shines).
it jump out of the water and eats its food when it gets back into the water
It gets its water from the food it eats,
It gets its water from the food it eats,
Consumer cause it eats it doesnt produce
It eats food and drinks water.
Nectar and sugar water.
YEP!
Buttercup plants do not eat food in the traditional sense like animals. They obtain nutrients through photosynthesis, which is a process where they use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to produce food for themselves.
it eats the plants in the desert to eat, and to get water from.
Yes. Farmers have to produce or grow the food the civilization eats, sells and trades.