Parasites
Anything that's not a producer or autotroph, which means it makes its own food. An organism that feeds on other organisms is a heterotroph, which could be a parasite, which feeds on dead organisms; a carnivore, which is a meat eater; or an herbivore, which feeds on plants.
Organisms that can consume other organisms for energy are known as heterotrophs. This includes animals, fungi, and some types of bacteria. Heterotrophs rely on consuming organic matter to obtain the energy they need for survival.
Organisms that depend on the food energy stored in other living organisms are called heterotrophs. These organisms cannot produce their own food and rely on consuming other organisms to obtain energy for survival. Examples include animals, fungi, and some types of bacteria.
Heterotrophs are organisms that depend on other organisms for their source of food and nutrition
Organisms that can't make their own food are known as heterotrophs. These organisms rely on other sources for their energy and nutrients, such as consuming other organisms or organic matter. Examples of heterotrophs include animals, fungi, and some bacteria.
Producers are organisms that make their own food using sunlight (photosynthesis) consumers are organisms that eat producers or other consumers and decomposers are organisms that return the dead organisms to their primary components such as oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide
Producers are organisms that make their own food using sunlight (photosynthesis) consumers are organisms that eat producers or other consumers and decomposers are organisms that return the dead organisms to their primary components such as oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide
Producers are organisms that make their own food using sunlight (photosynthesis) consumers are organisms that eat producers or other consumers and decomposers are organisms that return the dead organisms to their primary components such as oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide
Organisms that eat other organisms for energy are hetreotrophs.
All living organisms have to have a host to create other organisms. This includes micro organisms as well as bacterial organisms
Organisms that eat other organisms are called consumers or predators.
No. The lungs are part of what makes humans or other organisms organisms but they are not organisms.
Anything that's not a producer or autotroph, which means it makes its own food. An organism that feeds on other organisms is a heterotroph, which could be a parasite, which feeds on dead organisms; a carnivore, which is a meat eater; or an herbivore, which feeds on plants.
Organisms that secure food by eating other organisms are called consumers. They obtain nutrients by consuming other living organisms.
If I'm interpreting your question right...Organisms live everywhere in the world. The most diverse being the marine biome and the least diverse being the desert (I think).Organisms that provide food can be anything really. Autotrophs create their own food and provide food for herbivores, which in return provide food for carnivores and omnivores.
A Predator
Parasites