Examples of marine plants taken as products include seaweed, kelp, and algae which are used for food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals. Marine animals such as fish, shellfish, and seaweed-eating marine invertebrates like sea cucumbers are harvested for food or other purposes like medicine or materials.
Animals exhale carbon dioxide, which plants absorb during photosynthesis to produce oxygen.
These are food products, such as fruits, vegetables, grains, meat, dairy, and nuts, which are consumed to provide essential nutrients like vitamins, minerals, proteins, carbohydrates, and fats for the body's maintenance and growth.
When animals or plants die, the nitrogen in their tissues is broken down by decomposers like bacteria and fungi. This process releases nitrogen back into the soil in the form of ammonium. Some of this nitrogen can be taken up by plants through their roots to use for growth, while excess nitrogen can be converted into nitrate and enter the groundwater system.
The oxygen that plants make is taken up by humans. The humans take the oxygen and transform it into carbon dioxide. When the humans do this then the plants take it and change it back into oxygen. This is a never-ending cycle, without plants, humans and animals would die out, without humans and animals, plants would die out.
Water is essential for plants, animals, and people because it is required for most biological processes to occur. Plants need water for photosynthesis and nutrient uptake, animals need water for digestion and hydration, and people need water to stay hydrated, regulate body temperature, and transport nutrients and oxygen throughout the body.
The primary marine animal featured under this heading is the turtle.
Plants could clean and heal the body. Plants can also clean animals internally, when taken orally.
"Seafood" is the general name given to animals and plants that are taken from the oceans for comsumption by humans.
Animals consume plants which have taken phosphorus out of the soil. They then excrete it in the form of manure and biosolids which returns it to the soil.
Animals get carbon primarily by consuming plants or other animals that have already taken in carbon through eating plants. Carbon is a fundamental building block of life and is converted into organic molecules through cellular processes to provide energy for growth and maintenance.
Animals exhale carbon dioxide, which plants absorb during photosynthesis to produce oxygen.
Pabulum is any kind of food which is taken in by plants or animals, or material which feeds a fire.
These are food products, such as fruits, vegetables, grains, meat, dairy, and nuts, which are consumed to provide essential nutrients like vitamins, minerals, proteins, carbohydrates, and fats for the body's maintenance and growth.
There are various substances that animals release to the environment. Carbon dioxide is one of substances which is then taken in by plants for purposes of photosynthesis.
When plants and animals die, their organic matter decomposes through the action of bacteria, fungi, and other decomposers. This process releases nutrients back into the soil, which can then be taken up by plants to continue the nutrient cycle.
During photosynthesis, plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose (sugar) and oxygen. This glucose serves as a source of energy for the plant, which is then consumed by animals that eat the plants or other animals that have consumed plants. In this way, energy from sunlight is transferred through the food chain, ultimately meeting the energy needs of plants and animals.
Carbohydrates are used as an energy source for plants. They become crucial after a long hard winter where photosynthesis has not taken place. In this case, the plants rely on carbohydrate stores to provide the energy they need to produce new growth.