Answer:
Biotic factors and abiotic factors, plant and light energy, herbivores, heterotrophs, omnivores, carnivores, primary consumer, decomposers and tertiary consumers.
Explanation:
Both biotic and abiotic factors are interacting with each other in an ecosystem. Plants use light energy from the sun to produce their own food. Herbivores are the organisms that feed on producers (plants). Heterotrophs are those organisms which are unable to make their own food. Omnivores are the organisms that eat both plants and animals. Carnivores feed on animals only. Primary consumers are the consumer which feed on plants. Decomposers helps in the breakdown of dead bodies of plants and animals. Tertiary consumers feed on secondary consumer.
Plants gather the suns energy called pigments
Answer:
Baking a cake
Explanation:
The reason why is because everything mixes to become one thing. so while everything was mixing and getting baked, it was chemically changing
Answer:
-help to store water in the soil (by increasing infiltration) rather than evaporating (enabling the plants survive long periods of drought)
-mix inorganic and organic compounds in the soil (and thus it can better resist the process of erosion)
-termite’s feces help to prevent erosion
Explanation:
Decomposers break down complex organic matter into basic compounds containing nitrogen, phosphorus, and calcium, generating water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) during this process. Termites are critical in an ecosystem because they are decomposers, i.e., they are recyclers that break down organic material into nutrient-rich soil. For example, termites digest the cellulose from dead plants (due to the presence of specific bacteria in their digestive tract), thus allowing the carbon cycle.