When a bird is in flight, it is primarily exhibiting kinetic energy, which is the energy of motion. As the bird moves through the air, it has both forward velocity and lift, both of which contribute to its kinetic energy.
When the bird's head is in the water, the cool water soaks into the felt head. This causes the liquid inside the bird to contract, making the tail end denser. This causes the bird to tip the head out of the water. The air is warm enough to heat up the thin layer of water, causing the water to evaporate, and the liquid inside to expand. This makes it rise up the inside tube and tip the bird back into the water, and the cycle begins again. So, in short, I suppose the energy in the bird is stored as heat.
The potential energy of the bird can be calculated using the formula: Potential energy = mass x acceleration due to gravity x height. Plugging in the values, the potential energy of the bird is 106.524 Joules.
The bird in the tree has more gravitational potential energy because it is higher above the ground. Gravitational potential energy depends on an object's height relative to a reference point, in this case, the ground.
Any fluid/object in motion possesses Kinetic energy. Energy stored in an object/fluid due to its height is known as Potential energy. Water stored up in dam has potential energy and when it is allowed to flow downhill it possesses kinetic energy. Pendulum is also a good example to demonstrate both kinetic and potential energy. The total quantum of energy in this universe remains constant.
answer is 1 percent b/c the insect gets 10 percent of the plant's energy, and only 10 percent of that 10 percent is available for the bird
The energy stored in the insect comes from the plant through a series of transfers in the food chain. Plants convert sunlight into chemical energy via photosynthesis, which is then consumed by insects, storing a fraction of that energy in their bodies. When a bird eats the insect, it can access this stored energy, but typically only about 10% of the energy from the plant is passed on through each trophic level due to energy loss from metabolic processes and heat. Thus, the bird utilizes a small portion of the original energy the plant produced.
The sun's energy is captured by plants during photosynthesis, which are then eaten by the bird. When the cat consumes the bird, it obtains the stored energy from the plant indirectly through the bird it consumed.
Humming bird and honey bee help in the pollination of plants.
The sun's energy reaches a cat that eats a bird through the process of photosynthesis. Plants absorb sunlight and convert it into chemical energy, which is stored in their tissues. When a bird eats these plants, it consumes the stored energy, and when the cat eats the bird, it obtains that energy. Thus, the cat ultimately receives energy from the sun through the food chain.
evergreen: plant -to- small insect -to- bird -to- larger carnivorous mammal or just take out the insect tropical: plant -to- insect -to- small mammal or small bird -to- carnivorous mammal... or snake food chains and food webs ALWAYS start with a producer (plant) and end with a carnivor (meat eating animal) or omnivor (plant& animal eating animal)
Apex-Increased insect populations
It is a bird.
No its an insect.
No, it is an insect.
The thrush eats the caterpillar, which in turn feeds on the cabbage plant. This forms a simple food chain where the energy is transferred from the plant to the insect, and then to the bird.
By landing pollen grains of another compatible genotype on the stigma of a plant by insect, bird, water, wind or mammals