Frogs, being animals, are heterotrophs.
An autotroph (Greek- auto=self, troph=nutrition), such as a plant, makes its own food through the process of photo- or chemosynthesis, which a frog does not do- a frog is a heterotroph (Greek- hetero=other, troph=nutriotion), which means it has other means of receiving its food, for instance the frog, that gains its nutrition from eating other organisms.
Amoebae are heterotrophic.
No, a frog is not a plant so therefore it can not create its own food/energy. That would be cool if it could though...
euglenoids
Archaebacteria can be autotrophic, heterotrophic, or saprophytic. Some archaebacteria are capable of synthesizing their own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, while others rely on consuming organic matter or decaying material for energy.
they are both
Yes, a frog is a heterotrophic animal, not a autotrophic animal
some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic
Heterotrophic.
Amoebae are heterotrophic.
No, a frog is not a plant so therefore it can not create its own food/energy. That would be cool if it could though...
it is autotrophic nutrition
Heterotrophic
euglenoids
it is heterotrophic
Archaebacteria can be autotrophic, heterotrophic, or saprophytic. Some archaebacteria are capable of synthesizing their own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, while others rely on consuming organic matter or decaying material for energy.
heterotrophs
Horses are heterotrophic. It has to eat grass to live.