The image provided is a title slide for an educational lesson about
Ecosystems at
Level 5. It does not contain a specific question, math problem, or homework task to solve. Instead, it introduces the topic and shows three diagrams that explain:
1. What an ecosystem is (living + non-living things interacting).
2. How energy flows through food chains (plants → herbivores → carnivores/omnivores).
3. The role of decomposers in recycling nutrients.
Since there is no actual problem or question asked in the image — just introductory material — there is nothing to “solve” numerically or logically.
However, if this was meant to be part of a larger assignment and you’re expected to answer based on what’s shown, here’s what we can conclude from the visuals:
✔ An ecosystem includes both living things (like animals, plants) and non-living things (like water, sun, soil).
✔ Energy moves through ecosystems via food chains:
Sun → Plants → Herbivores → Carnivores/Omnivores
✔ Decomposers break down dead organisms and return nutrients to the soil so plants can use them again.
But again — since no explicit question was given (like “What is an ecosystem?” or “Draw a food chain”), I cannot provide a single “final answer” unless one is implied.
If you meant to ask:
> “What is the main idea shown in this image?”
Then the answer would be:
Final Answer:
An ecosystem is a system where living and non-living things interact, energy flows through food chains, and decomposers recycle nutrients.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of ecosystem science 4th grade.