carbohydrates.
It's a living thing that has the ability to act or function by itself.
sardines eat small orgaisms called zooplankton
Yes. Most microorganisms are useful, a few are harmful to us, plants, or other creatures.
Unicellular organisms develop, but only their one cell, and getting bigger. That is pretty much all the developing a unicellular organism will do.
Yes. Animal Plankton (very tiny orgaisms that swim through the water and is basically food for the puffer fish.)
when the organism dies it decomposes into the ground. the grass then grows form the ground which is eaten by an animal that will eventually die and once again decompose into the ground
Outside and inside of the cell wall, the Golgi apparatus, the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, all types of -somes, the nucleus: the drift is that your answer is -- EVERYWHERE, without exception.
Heterotrophs (don't make their own food): Fungi and Metazoa/Animalia There are some multicellular parasitic plants that don't make their own food either (evolved to be parasites, they don't even have cloroplasts) but for the most part Metaphyta/Plantae do make their own food and are part of what's called autotrophs.
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean
Mean is the average.