they are heterotrophic because they eat off of others
Mushrooms are not autotrophs. This is because they do not make their own food. They are actually heterotrophs because they decompose other plants in order to get their food.
Physarum polycephalum belongs to the supergroup Amoebozoa which are Heterotrophic organisms.
They can be either heterotrophic or autotrophic. they are grouped into three categorys. Animal-like, Plant-like, and fungus-like.I got info from here:http://www.lanesville.k12.in.us/lcsyellowpages/Tickit/Carl/protists.htmlit has way more info on that site.
some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic
No, not all protozoans are prokaryotic and autotrophic. Protozoans are eukaryotic organisms that can be autotrophic or heterotrophic. Autotrophic protozoans can photosynthesize like plants, while heterotrophic protozoans rely on organic matter for nutrition.
heterotrophic nutrition
Mold is heterotrophic, not autotrophic.
no its not a autotroph it is hetertrophic lives in gut of ruminance
Heterotroph.
all are eukaryotic
Mushrooms are not autotrophs. This is because they do not make their own food. They are actually heterotrophs because they decompose other plants in order to get their food.
yo moma ( loser who made this answer thats why i improved it) What that doesnt make any sense I need help in my homework and u are messing around
Physarum polycephalum belongs to the supergroup Amoebozoa which are Heterotrophic organisms.
They can be either heterotrophic or autotrophic. they are grouped into three categorys. Animal-like, Plant-like, and fungus-like.I got info from here:http://www.lanesville.k12.in.us/lcsyellowpages/Tickit/Carl/protists.htmlit has way more info on that site.
plants are autotrophic i.e they can manufacture their own food material because of presence of chloroplast. animals on the other hand, wether unicellular or multicellular, are hetertrophic i.e they cannot manufacture their own food material due to lack of chloroplast
autotrophic
Brown algae are primarily autotrophic, meaning they can perform photosynthesis to produce their own food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide. However, they can also be partially heterotrophic, meaning they can absorb nutrients from their environment to supplement their energy needs.