Autotrophs, just like flowers and grass, bacteria make their own food too! Bacteria are sometimes also heterotrophs as well. That means the oposite of aoutotrophs, they don't make their own food. Hope i helped :)
Organisms that can create their own food but do not produce seeds or spores are green algae and cyanobacteria. They use photosynthesis to generate their own food from sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water.
Some bacteria can, but most bacteria are decomposers with means they eat the dead things such as dead flowers,animals,and sometimes human,buts that's a different subject.
Organisms that make their own food are called producers.
Bacteria can be both producers and decomposers. Some bacteria are primary producers that can photosynthesize and create their own food, while others are decomposers that break down organic matter into simpler compounds.
Some organisms, such as certain bacteria and archaea, are able to produce their own food through chemosynthesis. This process uses inorganic compounds instead of sunlight to create organic compounds for energy. Deep-sea vent bacteria are a well-known example of organisms that use chemosynthesis to produce their own food.
grasses
Organisms that can create their own food but do not produce seeds or spores are green algae and cyanobacteria. They use photosynthesis to generate their own food from sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water.
All plants and most bacteria. An example could be green algae through photosynthesis.
Are plants the only organisms in an ecosystem that produce their own food? Ans:yes
Some bacteria can, but most bacteria are decomposers with means they eat the dead things such as dead flowers,animals,and sometimes human,buts that's a different subject.
bacteria cannot make its own food because scientists think they arent alive
Organisms that make their own food are called producers.
earthworm
An organism that makes its own food is called an autotroph or producer. These organisms are able to use energy from sunlight (photosynthesis) or inorganic compounds (chemosynthesis) to create organic nutrients that serve as their food source. Examples include plants, algae, and some bacteria.
Some bacteria, called autotrophs, make their own food from the carbon in CO2. Most bacteria are heterotrophs, taking their food 'ready-made' from other sources.
They are autotrophic
Yes and no. Some bacteria are autotrophs (make their own food with their environment around them and the sun's energy) and some are heterotrophs (can't make their own food so they eat autotrophs and other heterotrophs).