animal, plant, fungus
Yes
Animal like Protist, Fungus like Protist, and Plant like Protist
animal, plant and fungus
Yes, the categories animal-like, plant-like, and fungus-like are useful in classifying protists based on their characteristics and behaviors. These categories help to organize and identify the diverse group of protists based on their nutritional mode, mobility, and other defining features.
Animal-Like Plant-like fungus-like
A plant-like protista has chlorophyll in chloroplasts to make energy from the sunlight, and an animal-like protist gets its energy from other organisms. All plant-like protists are producers, while most animal-like protists are consumers, in other words.
The best way to tell the difference between plants and plant-like protists is that plant cells are part of a bigger structure, whereas plant-like protists are mostlyunicellular.Animal-like protists are even more different- for example, they are heterotrophs, so they can't make their food and don't have chloroplasts.
Animal-like protists are autotrophic, while plant-like protists are heterotrophic.
The three main types of protists are protozoa (animal-like protists), algae (plant-like protists), and slime molds (fungus-like protists). Each type of protist has unique characteristics and plays a different ecological role in various environments.
Animal-like protists are autotrophic, while plant-like protists are heterotrophic.
The three types of protists are protozoa (animal-like protists), algae (plant-like protists), and slime molds (fungus-like protists). Each type has unique characteristics and can be found in various environments.