is a bluebonnet plant a autotrophic or a heterotrophic
some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic
Answer The words "autotrophic" and "heterotrophic" are biological terms describing how an organism metabolyses carbon. Broadly speaking, an autotrophic organism is something like a green plant which metabolyses carbon by photosynthesis and a heterotrophic organism obtains carbon usually by eating an autotrophic organism. As a human, a British soldier would be heterotrophic.
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.
no because since they grow in the ground, they don't need to use the sun to make food for us.
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.
some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic
Animal-like protists are autotrophic, while plant-like protists are heterotrophic.
it is the planta kingdom actually but anyway it is autotrophic mostly but i am not sure about the flytrap plants
Heterotrophic.
The Venus flytrap is both heterotrophic and autotrophic.
Amoebae are heterotrophic.
Rafflesia is an autotrophic plant that exhibits a heterotrophic mode of nutrition by parasitizing on the roots of other plants. Cuscuta, also known as dodder, is another autotrophic plant that obtains nutrients by parasitizing the vascular systems of host plants.
it is autotrophic nutrition
Heterotrophic
An example is the Venus Fly Trap.
euglenoids
All plants are autotrophs, even carnivorous plants such as Venus fly traps.