Introducing
Your new presentation assistant.
Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.
Trending searches
When Himalayan Grass is eaten by wild goats of the mountains (one of which is the Siberian Ibex) Carbon is eaten. Through Respiration, Carbon is released into the air. Oxygen is inhaled and Carbon is exhaled. Carbon is moved to the Secondary Consumers when they eat Primary Consumers. An Example of a Secondary Consumer is a Snow Leopard.
Even when Carbon is being released into the air as part of Respiration there is still some Carbon still left in the body when the animal dies. Decomposrs (bacteria in this case) then breaks down these animals and return the carbon and water into the soil. If there are still parts of the animal left the Carbon helps make Fossil Fuels such as oil.
Snow Leopard
Bacteria
Siberian Ibex
=the movement of carbon
When Fossil Fuels are used to power machines, they dug up and burned to create energy. The burning of Fossil Fuels is known as Combustion. An example of this would be cars at the bottom of the mountains. Combustion releases the stored Carbon in the Fossil Fuels into the air. When a car burns Fossil Fuels it creates emissions (the carbon being released into the air).
Himalayan Grass is a Producer it uses Carbon to make energy and food for itself, by using a process called photosynthesis. It draws in Carbon and releases Oxygen. Producers are eaten by Primary Consumers.
Organisms used: Snow Leopard (Me!) a Secondary Consumer, Bacteria a Decomposer, Siberian Ibex a Primary Consumer, and Himalayan Grass a Producer.
Car
Thanks for Watching!