WHICH PROCESS PRODUCES MOST OXYGEN IN ATMOSPHERE PHOTOSYNTHESISI OR TRANSPIRATION

WHICH GAS DOES PHOTOSYNTHESISI PRODUCE OXYGEN OR CARBON DIOXIDE

GRAS--GRASSHOPPER-SNAKE-HAWK
IF APART OF A FOOD WEB WOULD MORE MORE ARROWS POINT TOWARD OR AWAY FOR THE SECOND LEVEL CONSUMER WHY

photosynthesis; oxygen.

YOu ought to really understand the photosynthesis equation and process.

Hawks eat more than snakes, as my chicken coop can attest.

Photosynthesis produces most oxygen in air.

Photosynthesis produces glucose and oxygen.

grasshopper arrow snake arrow hawk.

The hawk is the second level because even the grasshopper could have an arrow pointing to the hawk.

To determine which process produces the most oxygen in the atmosphere between photosynthesis and transpiration, we need to understand what each process does.

1. Photosynthesis: This process occurs in the cells of plants, algae, and some bacteria. It involves utilizing sunlight, carbon dioxide (CO2), and water (H2O) to produce glucose (C6H12O6) and oxygen (O2). The oxygen produced during photosynthesis is released into the atmosphere.

2. Transpiration: This process occurs in plants, specifically in their leaves. It involves the release of water vapor through tiny openings called stomata present on the leaf surface. Transpiration helps transport water and nutrients from the roots to other parts of the plant, but it does not directly release oxygen into the atmosphere.

Therefore, it is photosynthesis that produces oxygen in the atmosphere, while transpiration does not contribute significantly to oxygen production.

Regarding which gas photosynthesis produces, it produces oxygen (O2) as a byproduct and converts carbon dioxide (CO2) into glucose during the process.

Moving on to the food web question about grass, grasshoppers, snakes, and hawks, the arrows in a food web typically point towards the direction of energy flow.

Assuming that grass is the primary producer, grasshoppers are primary consumers, snakes are secondary consumers (feeding on the grasshoppers), and hawks are tertiary consumers (feeding on the snakes), the arrows would point from the grasshoppers towards the snakes and from the snakes towards the hawks.

This is because energy flows from producers to consumers. The grasshoppers gain energy by consuming grass, so the arrows point towards the grasshoppers. Similarly, the snakes gain energy by consuming grasshoppers, so the arrows point towards the snakes. Finally, the hawks gain energy by consuming snakes, so the arrows point towards the hawks.

In a food web, more arrows would typically point towards the consumers as they rely on the energy flow from the organisms they consume to obtain their energy and nutrients.