Biology: How Life Works
Biology: How Life Works
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9781319017637
Author: James Morris, Daniel Hartl, Andrew Knoll, Melissa Michael, Robert Lue, Andrew Berry, Andrew Biewener, Brian Farrell, N. Michele Holbrook
Publisher: Macmillan Higher Education
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Chapter 46.5, Problem 14SAQ
Summary Introduction

About 10 million species functions in the transfer of energy and cycling of carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous, nitrogen molecules through the food web. They are algae, plants, as well as bacteria. These organisms are able to conduct respiration as well as photosynthesis.

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Animals, plants as well as microbes obtain necessary compounds like carbon, energy, and organic compounds from the photosynthetic organisms. Microbes, amoebas, and humans might use the same biochemical pathway for respiration but differ in the kind of food which they eat. Fungi, as well as bacteria, absorb molecules to form the environment. Most of the eukaryotic organisms are predators that capture and ingest cells.

Photosynthetic bacteria and green plants are some of the photoautotrophs. Photosynthetic organisms possess structural as well as physiological adaptations to survive in their environments across the globe or diversified environment. Consumers survive through specialized adaptations such as perception, behavior and limb specialization to obtain their food.

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Students have asked these similar questions
Why, then, is there such a diversity of photosynthetic organisms?
Why is carbon important to life? What is the role of photosynthesis in the carbon cycle? What is the role of cellular respiration in the carbon cycle? How does the burning of fossil fuels contribute to the carbon cycle? How do death and decomposition contribute to the carbon cycle? Why is nitrogen important to life? How much of the atmosphere is made up of nitrogen gas? Why is N2 (atmospheric nitrogen) not usable by most organisms? What organisms are responsible for nitrogen fixation? How do plants receive the nitrogen that they require?  Why are bacteria essential to the carbon and nitrogen cycles?q
Why do we need green plants and other living things that carry out photosynthesis?
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Photosynthesis & Respiration | Reactions | Chemistry | FuseSchool; Author: FuseSchool - Global Education;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3XIyweZg6Sw;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY