All green plants are capable of photosynthesis. Some plants, like those living in deep-sea vents, use inorganic chemicals to manufacture their food.
No, not all plants engage in photosynthesis. Only green plants and certain microorganisms have the ability to perform photosynthesis. Other types of plants, like fungi and non-green algae, do not carry out photosynthesis.
for photosynthesizing
An increase in pollutants like nitrates or phosphates can lead to algal blooms in the water, which can overshadow photosynthesizing plants and reduce their growth due to competition for sunlight and nutrients. This decrease in photosynthesizing plants can disrupt the balance of the aquatic ecosystem and lower water quality.
A photosynthesizing organism is one that uses the energy of the sun to produce carbon-based materials from carbon dioxide & water; oxygen is produced as a by-product All green plants are photosynthesizing organisms; so are some algae
Plants. =P Plants are autotrophs, meaning 'self eating', photosynthesizing their own energie from the sun. All the rest of life is heterotrophs, or 'eating another'.
A heterotroph ('eating others'). This can mean the consumption of animals or plants (as both are organisms), and makes all animals, some plants (carnivorous or parasitic) and all fungi heterotrophs. 'Regular' photosynthesizing plants 'feed' off sunlight, making them autotrophs ('eating independently').
Photosynthesizing. Oxygen is a byproduct of the photosynthesis process in plants.
No. Plants emerged around 1.2 billion years ago, but there were photosynthesizing bacteria 3 billion years ago.
In plants, light passes through to the palisade mesophyll cells where most of the photosynthesis takes place.
No they move aroung and eat food (more like us) instead of photosynthesizing (getting energy from the sun, like plants.)
It means that it's photosynthesizing well... That's all
because they don't have chloroplasts.. these organelles are necessary for photosynthesis.