A chemosynthetic organism uses sulfur or other elements as a source of energy.
A chemosynthetic organism uses sulfur or other elements as a source of energy.
A chemosynthetic organism uses sulfur or other elements as a source of energy.
A chemosynthetic organism is an organism that manufactures it's own food by a process of chemosynthesis.
Chemosynthetic
organisms that manufacture food from chemical energy
A chemosynthetic organism is an organism that obtains energy by converting inorganic molecules such as hydrogen sulfide or methane into organic matter through the process of chemosynthesis. These organisms are commonly found in environments devoid of sunlight, such as deep-sea hydrothermal vents or cold seeps. Examples of chemosynthetic organisms include bacteria and archaea.
chemoautotrophs
A chemosynthetic organism uses sulfur or other elements as a source of energy.
Yes. Aerobic and anaerobic deal with how the organism converts its food into useful energy. Chemosynthetic deals with how the organism gets the food to begin with. Thus, the bacterium can make the food chemosynthetically and then convert it to useable energy aerobically. If you're using this for Biology 1 or 2.. Shame on you! You're cheating!
Shrimp, crabs, fish, tube worms, and octopi are the large organism that are feeding on chemosynthetic bacteria. They are creating a food chain of predator and prey relationship, the primary consumers are above the list.
An organism that obtains energy directly from inorganic molecules is called a chemosynthetic organism. These organisms convert chemicals like hydrogen sulfide or ammonia into energy through chemical reactions, instead of relying on light for energy like photosynthetic organisms. Chemosynthetic organisms can be found in environments such as hydrothermal vents in the ocean floor.
All chemeosynthetic organisms ar primary producers
you get it from the sky.