Euglena gets its nutrition from the chloroplasts inside of it. It may be a multicellular organism but it is VERY VERY tiny and the one way it gets glucose, the essential thing all organisms need, is by photosynthesis in its chloroplasts. How the process works is by this chemical equation:
H2O + sunlight + CO2 = O2 + C6H12O6
Simply put, this is water + sunlight + carbon dioxide = oxygen & glucose
I hope this answers your question!
Euglena get their energy by processing their own food through photosynthesis. They have chloroplasts which will help them in making food.
light or photosynthesis
i gotta use the bathroom
They use their flagelum
It gets its energy from the glucose
they lick my hairy crack
from its glucose
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
The chloroplast makes food for the Euglena so it can eat. The Euglena doesn't really need it though, because it can hunt for it's own food.
Pollution affects the growth of euglena by two simple aspects; sunlight and nutrients. The euglena can no longer obtain sunlight through the water if pollution is causing the water to become too polluted for sunlight to break through. Since the euglena can also absorb nutrients through the cell membrane, pollution can contaminate the nutrients that the euglena needs for survival, both ultimately causing the prevention of the euglena from creating or obtaining food.
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
they grow and reproduce. They obtain nutrients by taking in other microrganisms an make their own food by using the energy from sunlight
Euglena performs photosynthesis inside chloroplasts.
how do euglena obtain energy
The students are planning to write labels for their diagram, explaining how each part contributes to the function of the euglena. Which label would be most appropriate for the chloroplast? Responses "This structure helps the euglena obtain minerals from its environment so that it can perform life functions." "This structure helps the euglena obtain minerals from its environment so that it can perform life functions." "This structure helps the euglena remove food wastes from the cell after their nutrition has been used for life processes." "This structure helps the euglena remove food wastes from the cell after their nutrition has been used for life processes." "This structure helps the euglena use up energy it has stored in the process of building new cell parts and growing." "This structure helps the euglena use up energy it has stored in the process of building new cell parts and growing." "This structure helps the euglena obtain energy from its environment so that it can perform life functions."
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
Both. Euglena has chloroplasts to make food but it also surrounds and digests food from outside.
The chloroplast makes food for the Euglena so it can eat. The Euglena doesn't really need it though, because it can hunt for it's own food.
Pollution affects the growth of euglena by two simple aspects; sunlight and nutrients. The euglena can no longer obtain sunlight through the water if pollution is causing the water to become too polluted for sunlight to break through. Since the euglena can also absorb nutrients through the cell membrane, pollution can contaminate the nutrients that the euglena needs for survival, both ultimately causing the prevention of the euglena from creating or obtaining food.
All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though, euglena can also absorb food from their environment; euglena usually live in quiet ponds or puddles.
they grow and reproduce. They obtain nutrients by taking in other microrganisms an make their own food by using the energy from sunlight
A volvox makes there own food, so they eat there food that they make. I don't know what a euglena makes, sorry.
Peranema surround there food like euglena
Yes. All euglena have chloroplasts and can make their own food by photosynthesis. They are not completely autotrophic though,