Yea
No, it doesn't. It eats insects .
No, they peck wood/trees looking for insects.
Carnivorous plants - such as the Venus Fly-trap, Pitcher and Sundew - make their food from dissolving the bodies of the insects that are trapped. The plant excretes enzymes to break-down the tissues of the insects, and the plant absorbs the nutrients.
No, silverfish do not make their own food. They are scavengers that feed on starchy materials like book bindings, paper, and fabrics. They do not produce their own food through photosynthesis or any other means.
Yes.
They have to be as they can not make their own food as plants ( autotrophs ) can do. So, yes.
They need nitrogen, food is carbon based and although they are photosynthetic they need nitrogen in order to surivive.
Yes, the Pitcher Plant is a carnivorous plant that supplements its nutrient intake by trapping and digesting insects in its pitcher-shaped leaves. While it can photosynthesize to produce some of its own food, it relies on capturing insects to obtain the necessary nutrients that are lacking in its environment.
Yes most plants get their food through photosynthesis except some which also depend upon other plants or insects.
Heterotrophs, such as animals and fungi, cannot make their own food through photosynthesis and must consume other organisms for energy. They rely on organic matter produced by autotrophs to meet their nutritional needs.
Autotrophs can make their own food.
The animal kingdom does not make it own food. There is really no animals that make food