i think respiration
Nutrition.
Lipases are enzymes that break down fats and are involved in the digestive processes characteristic of heterotrophic nutrition. Heterotrophic organisms, such as animals and some fungi, rely on consuming organic materials for energy and nutrients, utilizing lipases to digest dietary fats. In contrast, autotrophic organisms, like plants, produce their own food through processes like photosynthesis and do not require lipases for their nutritional processes.
saprotophic nutrition is the nutrition of organisms which feed on dead animals
heterotrophic nutrition this is anouther person answering but its heterotrophic nutrition because this nutrition gets it food from its surroundings. Also, heterotrophic nutrition are examples of fugi. In this case the leaf opening would be an example of autrophic nutrition because its examples are plants and algae.
The blood carries nutrition to the entire body.
All living things, including plants, animals, and microorganisms, carry out the seven life processes which are: nutrition, respiration, movement, excretion, growth, reproduction, and sensitivity. These processes are essential for the survival and functioning of living organisms.
Yes, nutrition is a biological science that involves the study of how organisms obtain and use nutrients in their diet to support growth, maintenance, and health. It encompasses the various biochemical processes involved in the digestion, absorption, and metabolism of nutrients in the body.
heterotrophic
Heterophic
Animals eat and drink, when they defecate all the remaining nutrition from the food they drank and ate is then in the soil.
There are seven life processes that tell us that animals and plants are alive. To help us remember them use: Mrs Nerg. The letters in it stand for the life processes - movement, reproduction, sensitivity, nutrition, excretion, respiration and growth.
Animals get their nutrition much the same way as humans do. They find nutrition in what they eat, whether it be in plants and/or other animals. (Herbivores find nutrition solely in plants; Carnivores get nutrition from eating other animals; Omnivores get nutrition both from eating other animals as well as plants.) Animals can also gain nutrition from the water they drink. Water often contains certain vitamins and minerals that can be very beneficial (and sometimes dangerous) to an animal's health. Where an animal finds its nutrition specifically depends on what kind of animal it is and what kind of habitat it lives in.