The ultimate source of energy used by most ecosystems comes from the sun. Plants use the light of the sun to catalyze photosynthesis generate carbohydrates. Herbivores acquire this solar energy by eating the plants, and carnivores acquire it by eating the herbivores.
It is thought that some ecosystems at the bottom of the sea, at depths where sunlight does not reach, use geothermal energy from hot sea vents rather than solar energy, but this is an exception.
No. It used to be a part of a living thing though.
A Biochemist might study how energy is used in athletes during competition since they study chemical processes, and reactions in living organisms.
You can use solar panels, some cars run on it, TVS, heat and much more.
Sort of true. Actually only four make up most of all living things (C O H N), and ten make up 99.9% of living matter but tiny traces (even a dozen or so atoms) of exotic elements are used (and required) by "higher organisms".
So is the "heat" radiant heat, an electromagnetic wave? (Heat is used to mean many things.) Electricity gets turned into the electromagnetic infrared (heat).
Sunlight.
All living things use chemical energy.
The energy used by all living things starts with the sun. Through a process called photosynthesis, plants capture sunlight and convert it into chemical energy that is then passed through the food chain as organisms consume each other. This process is the foundation of all life on Earth.
i believe it's used as energy in all living things
Chemical Energy
The sun is the source of all energy except geothermal.
How is energy used by living things?some is transfered into the directily usable form of energy, ATP and is used that wayAll living things need energy to survive. Energy allows living things to grow, defend themselves,and move around.
Living things get energy from food during digestion. This is an exothermic reaction in which heat and electrons are released and used as energy.
to store energy : )
Producers
Glycogen
biomass