Heterotrophic!
Its heterotropic it cant make its own food.
Yes, they all are.
Fungi are heterotrophs, meaning they obtain nutrients by absorbing them from their environment rather than producing their own through photosynthesis. They decompose organic matter or live as parasites on other organisms.
Euglena is a protist that is capable of both autotrophic and heterotrophic nutrition. It can photosynthesize like a plant in the presence of light but can also feed on organic matter when light is not available.
some fungi are autotrophic while some are'nt.
It's one of these four: heterotrophic algae and autotrophic fungi heterotrophic bacteria and heterotrophic fungi autotrophic algae and autotrophic fungi autotrophic bacteria and heterotrophic fungi But I'm mot sure which.
Heterotroph
Algae is autotrophic while fungi is not. Therefore fungi does not make food by itself as does algae.
No, fungi are not autotrophic. They are heterotrophic organisms, meaning they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment. Fungi secrete enzymes to break down complex organic molecules into simpler forms that they can then absorb for nutrition.
Fungi, specifically Rhizopus, are saprophytic. They obtain nutrients by decomposing organic matter in their environment. They are not autotrophic, as they cannot produce their own food through photosynthesis.
Kingdom fungi are heterotrophic, meaning they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment. They do not produce their own food through photosynthesis like autotrophic organisms do.
The kingdom Animalia contains non-autotrophs.