No
They are type of protozoans. Amoeba are chemoheterotrophic organisms
Your question doesn't make much sense.... Amoeba do not carry out photosynthesis to my knowledge.
a amoeba
If an amoeba can create its own fuel using a process like photosynthesis, then yes. If it has to scavenge for its food, like herbivores, then it is a heterotroph.
Characteristics that make amoeba and paramecium animal-like include locomotion and lack of photosynthesis.
No, because chloroplast is only found in plants, which they use for photosynthesis.
Euglena is a protozoan that is capable of conducting photosynthesis. It contains chlorophyll pigments that enable it to produce energy from sunlight.
Amoebas eat by wrapping their bodies around their food and chlamydomonas eat by photosynthesis.
Amoeba is animal-like because they can not do photosynthesis which other plant-like protists can do. Amoeba are protozoans. Amoeba hunt for their food. They eat bacteria, smaller protozoans and other smaller organisms.
No, amoebas are unable to photosynthesize. They are heterotrophic organisms that obtain their energy by consuming other organisms or organic matter. Photosynthesis is a process carried out by autotrophic organisms like plants and algae to produce energy from sunlight.
In Spirogyra, chloroplasts are visible, which are not present in Amoeba and Paramecium. Chloroplasts are responsible for photosynthesis, allowing Spirogyra to produce its own food. Additionally, Spirogyra has cell walls made of cellulose, while Amoeba and Paramecium have flexible cell membranes, making those structures distinct as well.
Amoeba releases energy through the process of cellular respiration, which involves breaking down glucose molecules to generate ATP. Paramecium obtains energy through a combination of aerobic respiration and anaerobic fermentation. Euglena uses a specialized organelle called a chloroplast to conduct photosynthesis and produce energy in the form of ATP.
cells are in a amoeba