Alga is not a heterotrophic organism. It is an autotrophic organism because it prepares its food on its own by using the phenomena of photosynthesis. Algae has chlorophyll (due to which it appears green) which helps it to capture the solar energy which helps it to prepare its food in the presence of water, nutrients & oxygen.
It's one of these four: heterotrophic algae and autotrophic fungi heterotrophic bacteria and heterotrophic fungi autotrophic algae and autotrophic fungi autotrophic bacteria and heterotrophic fungi But I'm mot sure which.
The organism itself is heterotrophic but it may possess a symbiotic algae living within it which acts as an autotroph. Overall it would be considered heteroptrophic.
No, algae are not part of the fungi kingdom. They belong to their own kingdom called Protista. Algae are photosynthetic organisms that can be unicellular or multicellular, whereas fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain nutrients through absorption.
Brown algae are autotrophic, meaning they can produce their own food through photosynthesis. They contain chlorophyll and other pigments that allow them to convert sunlight into energy to produce sugars.
The kingdom that can be described as eukaryotic, both unicellular and multicellular, and capable of being autotrophic and heterotrophic is the Protista. Protists include a diverse range of organisms, such as algae (which are autotrophic) and protozoa (which are often heterotrophic). This diversity allows them to occupy various ecological niches in different environments.
Protozoans are heterotrophic, whereas algae are autotrophic.
Algae are autotrophs, which means they produce their own food.
Stentors are heterotrophic. They eat bacteria and algae.
If an organism in Kingdom Protista is heterotrophic, it is most likely in the subkingdom Algae. Algae are photosynthetic protists and are considered autotrophic, but there are some heterotrophic species within this group as well.
It's one of these four: heterotrophic algae and autotrophic fungi heterotrophic bacteria and heterotrophic fungi autotrophic algae and autotrophic fungi autotrophic bacteria and heterotrophic fungi But I'm mot sure which.
The subgroups of monera are heterotrophic and autotrophic. Heterotrophic are basically the types of bacteria, meanwhile autotrophic is a type of blue-green algae.
Fungi are heterotrophic organisms- they can't synthesize their own food. Algae do perform photosynthesis thus making them autotrophic. Fungi and algae are not animals.
What algae will consume depends on the particular species of algae, whether autotrophic, heterotrophic, or mixotrophic, and the conditions it is in. Photoautotrophic algae (plant-like algae) mostly need sunlight, Nitrogen, Potassium, and Phosphorus as well as water and CO2. Other species are able to survive without sunlight and others feed on bacteria and sugars instead of making their own sugars. Sometimes even photoautotrophic and heterotrophic algae if in lack of O2, they can no longer respirate so they go into anaerobic respiration and ferment.
Protists can be either autotrophic (algae) or heterotrophic (amoeba). See the link below:
In some cases, both can be heterotrophic. They are both types of plantlike protists.
All plants, phytoplankton, algae, and a class of bacteria known as photosynthetic [or 'heterotrophic'] use photosynthesis.
The organism itself is heterotrophic but it may possess a symbiotic algae living within it which acts as an autotroph. Overall it would be considered heteroptrophic.