yES
No
Bacteria feed on living things by breaking down organic matter, including sugars, proteins, and fats, which they obtain from host organisms or their environment. Some bacteria are decomposers, feeding on dead organic material, while others can be pathogens that derive nutrients from living hosts, often causing disease in the process. Additionally, certain bacteria form symbiotic relationships with living organisms, providing benefits such as nutrient cycling in exchange for sustenance.
other living things and whatever meat you throw to them.
Mice are also considered consumers because they also feed off of other living organisms and plants in order to survive.Producers are things such as plants and trees,things that feed off of Earth's soils and nutrients that provide food for other living organisms.
All members of the Protista Kingdom make their own food or feed on other living things. All protists are eukaryotic, and most are unicellular.
A living thing that eats other living things is a heterotroph. Heterotrophs are organisms that cannot produce their own food and rely on consuming other organisms for energy. This contrasts with autotrophs, which can produce their own food through processes like photosynthesis. Examples of heterotrophs include animals, fungi, and some types of bacteria.
Vent animals like limpets, clams, and mussels feed soley on bacteria. Other animals depend on sunlight to live and vent animals do not get sunlight.
They feed and they reproduce these are characteristics of living things
a parasite
Bacteria feeds off all different things, depending on the type of bacteria it is. For example, photosynthetic bacteria will typically eat food that it has made off of sunlight. Whereas other forms of bacteria will eat iron and sulfur.
living things feed in order to survive and they feed because food provides them with materials for energy and growth
Zooprotists, or animal-like protists. They feed on other living things.