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Yes, that is true. In a food chain, an animal passes on only about 10 percent of the energy it receives. The rest is used up in maintaining it's body, or in movement, or it escapes as heat. The amount of available energy decreases at every trophic level, and each level supports fewer individuals than the one before. This results in a pyramid of numbers with many organisms at the bottom and few at the top.

2007-04-19 08:54:01 · answer #1 · answered by Niotulove 6 · 0 0

Yes, organisms eat and digest, and use that to make energy for their bodies to work. Any energy they don't immediately use, they store (often in the form of fat). When another organism eats the first, the energy stored becomes available to the eater.

2007-04-19 06:16:11 · answer #2 · answered by kt 7 · 0 0

Did you advise ingredient? As a everyday rule, some million% of power is going from the manufacturers to shoppers. After that approximately 15% of that power from herbivores (known shoppers) is going to the subsequent point. finally, all different shoppers pass approximately 10% of the the rest power to the subsequent point. maximum generally nevertheless, human beings use 10% oftentimes of thumb.

2016-12-20 19:05:28 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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