Most fungi, bacteria, and protists.
Kingdom fungi are heterotrophic, meaning they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment. They do not produce their own food through photosynthesis like autotrophic organisms do.
Whittaker distinguished the kingdom Fungi from the kingdom Animalia based on the mode of nutrition. Fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain their nutrients from decaying organic matter or by parasitizing other living organisms, while animals are also heterotrophic but obtain their nutrients by ingesting food.
Protista are eukaryotic microorganisms, Plantae are multicellular organisms that photosynthesize, Fungi are eukaryotic organisms that absorb nutrients from their surroundings, and Animalia are multicellular organisms that consume food to obtain energy.
Phylum Arthropoda exhibits primarily heterotrophic nutrition, obtaining nutrients by consuming other organisms or organic matter. Most arthropods are classified as omnivores, herbivores, or carnivores depending on their feeding habits. Some arthropods also engage in parasitic or symbiotic relationships to obtain nutrients.
Moulds belong to the kingdom Fungi. They are multicellular organisms that obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment.
An absorptive heterotroph.
The kingdom that is made up of organisms that are eukaryotic and heterotrophic is Kingdom Fungi. Fungi are important decomposers in ecosystems and obtain their nutrients by absorbing organic matter from their environment.
A heterotrophic eukaryote that absorbs nutrients from organic materials in the environment is most likely a fungus. Fungi are known to decompose organic matter and absorb nutrients through their mycelium, which allows them to play a crucial role in nutrient cycling in ecosystems.
True. Animallike protists are heterotrophic organisms that obtain nutrients by absorbing them from other organisms or organic materials in their environment.
eukaryote, heterotroph, and reproduce with spores. there can be exceptions.
Heterotroph
No, not all eukaryotes are heterotrophic. Eukaryotes can be classified as heterotrophic (obtain nutrients from external sources), autotrophic (produce their own nutrients through photosynthesis), or mixotrophic (capable of both heterotrophic and autotrophic nutrition).
Fungi are mostly autotrophs but some are heterotroph
A planarian is heterotrophic, meaning it obtains nutrients by consuming other organisms or organic matter in its environment. It is not autotrophic, as it cannot produce its own food through photosynthesis, and it is not saprotrophytic, as it does not obtain nutrients by decomposing dead organic matter.
Kingdom fungi are heterotrophic, meaning they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment. They do not produce their own food through photosynthesis like autotrophic organisms do.
Physarum polycephalum belongs to the supergroup Amoebozoa which are Heterotrophic organisms.
No, fungi are not autotrophic. They are heterotrophic organisms, meaning they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter in their environment. Fungi secrete enzymes to break down complex organic molecules into simpler forms that they can then absorb for nutrition.