Yes. All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though,
No They Don't
The chloroplast makes food for the Euglena so it can eat. The Euglena doesn't really need it though, because it can hunt for it's own food.
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
Euglena are unique, they are both heterotrophic (must consume food) and autotrophic (can make its own food). Euglena have chloroplasts that trap sunlight which are used for photosynthesis.
Heterotrophs are not able to manufacture their own food. This is why they must eat other organisms to get food.
The chloroplast makes food for the Euglena so it can eat. The Euglena doesn't really need it though, because it can hunt for it's own food.
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
A volvox makes there own food, so they eat there food that they make. I don't know what a euglena makes, sorry.
Plants manufacture their own food.
Euglena
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
Well if they're making their own food, then that means they're auto trophic, they use photosynthesis. If euglena can't get sunlight, they can also absorb nutrients from decayed matter.
the euglena is unigue in that is both heterotrophic(must consume food) and autotrophic(can make its own food). -chloroplast within the euglena trap sunlight that is used for photosynthesis, and can be seen as several rod like structures throughout the cell.
Although catigorized as an animal life question, a euglena is actually a protist. Euglenas are autotrophs (they contain chloraphyll and produce their own food) and are motile (able to move on their own). ---AIIB_great_AB
Euglena's are both heterotrophic and autotrophic because they can make their own food with photosynthese and also absorb food from their environment.
Euglena are unique, they are both heterotrophic (must consume food) and autotrophic (can make its own food). Euglena have chloroplasts that trap sunlight which are used for photosynthesis.
The answer is a euglena has parts that allow it to move and catch food as an animal does. It also has chloroplasts, so it can make its own food, as a plant does.