a thing with carbon and air in it
Yes, organisms such as certain strains of bacteria like Escherichia coli can use citrate as a sole carbon source for growth under specific conditions. This ability is known as citrate utilization and is commonly studied in microbiology laboratories.
Energy flows up a food chain, from the primary producers to the primary consumers, to the secondary consumers, up to the tertiary and then quaternary consumers. Energy flows when one organism eats another.
Classification provides a common language for scientists, and gives a common reference point with already identified organisms.
Identifying an organism is important in understanding its characteristics, behavior, ecological role, and potential impact on ecosystems or human health. It helps in conservation efforts, pest management, disease control, and overall biodiversity research. Additionally, correct identification is necessary for effective communication and collaboration among scientists and researchers.
Yes a human can be an organisum, almost everything is an organisum.
HIV
i am only a 5th grader and we just went over that and when a organisum eats a organisum then it gets energy from eating it
it is simmilar because its an organisum
micro-organisum
Humans and you spelled organism wrong
no other organisum has one .
Tertiary consumers in the ecosystem are animals who do not eat other of the same organisum aka the tertiaryoganero
By being bitten by a striped Aedes aegypti mosquito that has previosly bitten an infected person.
Organisum try there best to coexist. Becasue no one likes to be pushed out.
I'm happy to help! Please provide the name of the organism you would like facts about.
It is used to decribe organisms by their certain characteristics . (Ex. color, fur texture,etc)