heterotrophs
well organisims are people,animals & all living things.carnivores eat animals or people.it is a carnivore!
organisims that break down dead organisims to eat them
they don't
wide range of marine organisims
wide range of marine organisims
All organisims are living because, they all have the same characteristics, we need to eat, sleep, have water, excreamate and urinate and that has (or can develop) the ability to act or function independently . Organisims are all mover the place, mammals,birds,reptiles,fungie,fish, plants anything with those characteristics. There are such things as bio organisims. bio organisims are things like rocks, shoes, desks, chairs who can not move independantly, eat, drink, sleep, excreamate or urinate and these objects are not organisims. Happy to help.
Heterotrophs must 'eat' other organisims in order to survive and make ATP, while autotrophs (such as plants) make their own food from the air
Because estuaries hold organisims which eat enery in a food chain.
they are just like plants so all they need is a five metre water pit and some sun and if the plant is too deep under water then the plant will die
Foxes, coyotes, badgers, roadrunners, tarantulas, hawks, eagles, skunks, other snakes and many other animals consider snakes to be a meal.hawks...In the United States there are a variety of organisims that will eat a snake:tarantulas,roadrunners,hawks,eagles,ravens,foxes,bobcats,ringtails,skunks,weasels,badgers,pumas,and others
It depends on the species. Many are filter feeders that filter algea from the water, while some are predacious and will eat other small aquatic organisims. Some Posion dart frogs eat a non fertile egg that the female lays in a an aboreal pool.
The wonderful thing about Earth is the recycling! As living things die, their bodies decay and break down into atoms, which are then taken up by other living things and used again. Plants take nutrients and matter from the soil, and animals eat the plants and use the nutrients in their own bodies, and so on, and so on.