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The most general answer is a consumer, which is then divided into carnivores (which eat other animals), herbivores (which eat plants) and detrivores (which eat non-living organic material).
Organisms that use sunlight are photosynthetic (like plants, algae, etc.) and organisms that must eat food are consumers (us, etc.).
a heterotroph
Any animal that's not a producer. A producer produces its own food so it doesn't get energy from an organism. An example of an animal could be a hawk. When it eats a rat the energy from the rat goes to the hawk.
Energy transfers between organisms by making a animal eat a plant which gets it energy so then other animals eat that energy having animal. So that's how energy is transferred between organisms.
Heterotrophic.
You are describing a consumer. They do not make their own food like plants do.
To derive energy from food you must eat foods that contain
The most general answer is a consumer, which is then divided into carnivores (which eat other animals), herbivores (which eat plants) and detrivores (which eat non-living organic material).
Organisms that use sunlight are photosynthetic (like plants, algae, etc.) and organisms that must eat food are consumers (us, etc.).
No - producers are organisms that create their own food (such as plants). All animals are consumers, they must eat other organisms to obtain energy.
yes, all organisms must eat in order to attain energy.
a heterotroph
They get energy from their food, so their not tired most of the time
Heterotrophs or consumers.
Most animals
Any animal that's not a producer. A producer produces its own food so it doesn't get energy from an organism. An example of an animal could be a hawk. When it eats a rat the energy from the rat goes to the hawk.