Yes, multi-celled organisms and even single-cell organisms can move on their own.
No, not all animal cells move independently. Some animal cells are part of tissues and organs that are anchored in place and do not move on their own. Other cells, like immune cells and muscle cells, have the ability to move independently within the body.
An organism that cannot make its own food is called a heterotroph. Heterotrophs rely on external sources of organic compounds for nutrition, as they cannot perform photosynthesis or chemosynthesis to produce their own food. Examples include animals, fungi, and some bacteria.
An animal that produces its own food is called an autotroph. For example plants
No, a producer is an organism that can make its own food through processes like photosynthesis. They do not rely on consuming other organisms for energy like consumers do.
a unicellular organism is only made up of one cell so yeah pretty self-explanatory......... Unicellular organisms typically reproduce asexually through binary fission or budding so that one cell can produce a ton of offspring all by itself
humans are an aswer that an organism can move on their own
your a multicellular organism.... yes, they can move on their own.
Fungi.
Yes they do they are a kind of "(half- animal, half-plant)" organism. They are called that because they can move around and also make their own food like plants can. And also they are a microscopic organism that has only a single cell in it's body.
It means that the organism does not move. Sprotozoans from the protoza kingdom usually dont move. It dosent have flagellae, or pseudopodia to move, or cilia.
An organism that can reproduce on its own has asexual reproduction
An organism that makes its own food by photosynthesis is an autotroph.
No, but euglena is part animal (it can move around) and part plant (it can make its own food.) It is a single-celled organism.
An organism that is not capable of making its own food must consume another organism for energy. They are termed heterotrophs.
movement
it is move
Heterotroph