fungus
Kingdom Animalia is the kingdom you're looking for - it is inside the domain Eukaryota, meaning the organisms within it are eukaryotic; all organisms are multicellular; and no organism inside the kingdom can fix carbon.
A heterotroph is an organism that requires other organism to survive. Multicellular organisms have more than one cell. So being multicellular and heterotroph means that the organism is multicelled and depends on other organisms to survive.
The kingdom that lives on land and absorbs its food from other living or nonliving things is the kingdom Animalia. Animals are heterotrophic organisms that obtain their nutrients by consuming other organisms or organic matter. They can be predatory, herbivorous, or omnivorous, depending on their feeding habits.
It's parasitic, so it's heterotrophic and does not make its own food.
All fungi are heterotrophic as they do not preform photosynthesis and generally decompose organic matter for food.
Animals (the animal kingdom), by definition, are multicellular and heterotrophic. Animals cannot produce their own food. They feed on other organismal sources for their energy. They feed on plants or other animals. Thus be their definition of heterotrophic. All animals (whether Chordata, Echinodermata, Porifera, Placozoa, Annelida or Arthropoda) are all heterotrophic and all multicellular. Even tiny things like placozoans and rotifers are multicelled.Fungi cannot produce their own food either. Thus they may be called heterotrophic. They acquire their food by growing in it. Thus they acquire the label saprophytic as well. The fungal kingdom features both unicellular and multicellular organisms. Toadstools, mushrooms, bread mould, fruit mould and such are those that are multicellular.
Animals (the animal kingdom), by definition, are multicellular and heterotrophic. Animals cannot produce their own food. They feed on other organismal sources for their energy. They feed on plants or other animals. Thus be their definition of heterotrophic. All animals (whether Chordata, Echinodermata, Porifera, Placozoa, Annelida or Arthropoda) are all heterotrophic and all multicellular. Even tiny things like placozoans and rotifers are multicelled.Fungi cannot produce their own food either. Thus they may be called heterotrophic. They acquire their food by growing in it. Thus they acquire the label saprophytic as well. The fungal kingdom features both unicellular and multicellular organisms. Toadstools, mushrooms, bread mould, fruit mould and such are those that are multicellular.
Kingdom Animalia is the kingdom you're looking for - it is inside the domain Eukaryota, meaning the organisms within it are eukaryotic; all organisms are multicellular; and no organism inside the kingdom can fix carbon.
A heterotroph is an organism that requires other organism to survive. Multicellular organisms have more than one cell. So being multicellular and heterotroph means that the organism is multicelled and depends on other organisms to survive.
no because since they grow in the ground, they don't need to use the sun to make food for us.
Heterotrophic- it feeds off the food that is ingested by the organism.
A heterotrophic is an organism that depends on other organisms for their food.
The kingdom that lives on land and absorbs its food from other living or nonliving things is the kingdom Animalia. Animals are heterotrophic organisms that obtain their nutrients by consuming other organisms or organic matter. They can be predatory, herbivorous, or omnivorous, depending on their feeding habits.
Multi celled, eukaryotic, heterotrophic
It's parasitic, so it's heterotrophic and does not make its own food.
Heterotrophs, they don't produce their own food.
its a heterotroph