Bryozoans are primarily heterotrophs, as they feed on microscopic particles, such as plankton and detritus, which they capture using their lophophore, a specialized feeding structure. While some bryozoans can harbor photosynthetic symbionts, they do not produce their own food like autotrophs. Instead, they rely on their ability to filter feed from their environment for sustenance.
heterotrphy
A pecan tree is an autotroph, meaning it produces its own food through the process of photosynthesis. It converts sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide into glucose and oxygen, using chlorophyll in its leaves. This ability allows it to sustain itself and grow without relying on other organisms for nourishment.
While some autotrophs are categorized by some scientists as protozoans e.g., Euglena, most consider protozoans to be those single-celled organisms that are heterotrophic.
Microscopic organisms can be either heterotrophs or autotrophs. Heterotrophs rely on organic compounds as a food source, while autotrophs can produce their own energy through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis.
autotroph
Neither. A virus is not really alive in a traditional sense.
A hetrotroph is an animal that finds it food, like a human or a cheetah. Instead of making our food (autotroph) we have to search for it.
heterotrphy
Is a groundhog a autotroph
A pecan tree is an autotroph, meaning it produces its own food through the process of photosynthesis. It converts sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide into glucose and oxygen, using chlorophyll in its leaves. This ability allows it to sustain itself and grow without relying on other organisms for nourishment.
Autotrophs produce their own food, heterotrophs can't make their own food. Herbivores eat plants, carnivores eat meat, omnivores eat both plants and meat. Grasshopper:heterotroph, herbivore
Easy. it is a heterotroph. an autotroph is a plant or anything that makes it own food. a hetrotroph is consumes its food.
Hugo I. Moyano G. has written: 'Southern Pacific Bryozoa' -- subject(s): Bryozoa, Classification 'Briozoos de Chile Austral' -- subject(s): Bryozoa
yes
Dale Richard Thompson has written: 'Astogenetic study of some trepostomatous bryozoa in the Waynesville formation of the Richmond group' -- subject(s): Bryozoa, Fossil, Fossil Bryozoa, Geology
Cameron Knox has written: 'The Bryozoa of Puget Sound and adjacent regions' -- subject(s): Bryozoa
A. I Nikiforova has written: 'Stratigraficheskoe raspredelenie mshanok ..' -- subject(s): Bryozoa, Fossil, Fossil Bryozoa, Paleontology