# green parasitic plants # predetor plants-usually catch insects
venus flytrap or pitcher plant
Venus Flytrap
cuscuta and mushroom
neem peepal aloevirra
pitcher plant
Cyanobacteria. Algae
Calanoida is the scientific name for a copepod, all zooplankton are in the family heterotrophic plankton.
The list of the differences between fungi and plantae is extremely long... * Plants are Photosynthesizers, Fungi are decomposers * Plants and Fungi have completely different cell makeup * Plants come from seeds, Fungi don't The list goes on and on... It seems that the only reason that anyone would even think of classifying them under the same Kingdom name, is that they are both stationary, and cannot go find their own food.
Plasmodium's mode of nutrition is PARASITIC
The Venus flytrap is both heterotrophic and autotrophic.
pitcher plant
Rust is the plant which falls under the division thallophyta (fungi) . Puccinia is the scientific name of it .It mode of nutrition is heterotrophic .They draws there nutrient from host living cell .
Rust is the plant which falls under the division thallophyta (fungi) . Puccinia is the scientific name of it .It mode of nutrition is heterotrophic .They draws there nutrient from host living cell .
All plants are autotrophs and some bacteria and fungi are too. I think that some protists are too.
Autotrophic archaebacteria, in the biological classification system, are members of the class halobacteria. Halobacteria live in salt water. Some species of halobacteria are: Halobacterium cutirubrum > Halobacterium salinarumHalobacterium denitrificans > Haloferax denitrificansHalobacterium distributum > Halorubrum distributumHalobacterium halobium > Halobacterium salinarumHeterotrophic archaebacteria are members of the class Methanobacteria. As their name suggests, these species metabolize methane gas to create energy. An example of this species is methanobacterium aarhusense.
i think its any producer so basically any that use chemosynthesis or photosynthesis. so plants and SOME bacteria stuff like that
Cyanobacteria. Algae
Calanoida is the scientific name for a copepod, all zooplankton are in the family heterotrophic plankton.
Calanoida is the scientific name for a copepod, all zooplankton are in the family heterotrophic plankton.
The list of the differences between fungi and plantae is extremely long... * Plants are Photosynthesizers, Fungi are decomposers * Plants and Fungi have completely different cell makeup * Plants come from seeds, Fungi don't The list goes on and on... It seems that the only reason that anyone would even think of classifying them under the same Kingdom name, is that they are both stationary, and cannot go find their own food.
Nourishment