Look at it this way:-All life needs energy, to grow, move, reproduce etc.The source of this energy is the light from our local star (the Sun).Animals can not make thir own food or use of sunlight directly - they obtain the energy they need by eating plants or other animals that eat plants. Animals are consumers.Plants however can make direct use of sunlight, their green leaves trap the sunlight and store the energy of the sunlight as chemical energy in sugars which they produce. Plants are therefore called producers.Thus as you can see plants form the basis of the energy supply for all animals.
Land-dwelling living creatures primarily depend on the sun as the initial source of energy through photosynthesis. Plants convert sunlight into chemical energy through photosynthesis, which is then consumed by animals for energy.
Animals do not capture energy directly from the sun like plants through photosynthesis. Instead, animals indirectly obtain solar energy by consuming plants or other animals that have stored energy from the sun. The energy from the sun is passed through the food chain and eventually utilized by animals for various biological processes.
No. All animals are consumers, not producers.However, there are certain protists like dinoflagellates, diatoms and algae that are producers and make energy from sunlight.
Animals do not directly use solar energy for energy production like plants do through photosynthesis. However, animals indirectly benefit from solar energy by consuming plants and animals that have derived their energy from the sun. Additionally, animals may utilize sunlight for activities such as basking to regulate body temperature or synchronize their biological rhythms.
plants: sunlight for photosynthesis animals: plants, other animals
because if they had no sunlight they wouldn't have the energy they need to use respiration in cells
Plants need sunlight to produce sugars which they use for their nutrition. Then herbivore animals eat the plant to get energy and after that the carnivore animals eat the herbivore animals for the same reason. The energy of sunlight has traveled through plants, herbivores and carnivores, for example to humans who eat other animals.
No but they stay healthy from the Vitamin D3
Animals depend on the sun indirectly as they rely on consuming plants or other animals that have obtained energy from sunlight through the process of photosynthesis. The sun is the ultimate source of energy that sustains the entire food chain and ecosystem.
Plants get their energy through photosynthesis, converting sunlight into chemical energy. Animals get their energy by consuming plants or other animals. This natural process has been occurring for millions of years before the use of fossil fuels.
Fur, sunlight, energy, and/or constant moving.
No. Neither can plants, for that matter. Animals get the energy they need from plants, or from other animals, which they eat. Plants get their energy from the sunlight.
Yes - indirectly. We get energy from the food we eat, which comes from animals or plants; animals also get their energy from plants; and plants get the energy from sunlight.
Energy in the form of water, sunlight, and air.
Sunlight is the original source of all energy everywhere on Earth. Light energy from the Sun transforms to chemical potential energy through photosynthesis in autotrophs (plants). Then we eat the plants for the energy, or eat the animals that ate the plant, or eat the animals that ate the animals that ate the plant, or ate the animals that ate the animals....etc After they die, plants and animals also can turn into hydrocarbons (oil) and other forms of chemicals over long periods of time which we then use to generate electricity.
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.