it is whe you dont know how old somthing is
Animals within the Animalia kingdom do not make their own food. Instead, they obtain nutrients by consuming other organisms or organic matter. This process is known as heterotrophy.
Heterotroph, autotrophs can create their own food (plants and some bacteria). Heterotrophs consume other organisms to aquire their energy and much energy is lost between each level.
Golden algae are typically autotrophs, meaning they can produce their own food through photosynthesis. Some golden algae species may also exhibit mixotrophic behavior, meaning they can switch between autotrophy and heterotrophy depending on environmental conditions.
Protists are primarily unicellular organisms, although some can form colonies or multicellular structures. They are eukaryotic, meaning their cells contain a nucleus and various organelles. Additionally, protists exhibit diverse nutritional modes, including autotrophy (photosynthesis) and heterotrophy (ingesting other organisms).
Fungi obtain energy through a process known as heterotrophy. They absorb nutrients by secreting enzymes that break down organic matter in their environment, allowing them to absorb the resulting smaller molecules. This makes them important decomposers in ecosystems, as they recycle nutrients from dead organisms and organic materials.
An adverb for heterotrophy. For example, many organisms live heterotrophycally, which means they with use heterotrophy to live.
Animal heterotrophy involves directly ingesting and digesting food within specialized digestive systems, while fungi heterotrophy involves secreting enzymes to break down external organic material and absorbing the resulting nutrients. Animals have a more complex body structure with specialized organs for ingestion, digestion, and absorption, whereas fungi have a simpler structure with mycelium for nutrient uptake.
Autotrophy is the ability of an organism to produce its own food using inorganic compounds, such as plants that photosynthesize. Heterotrophy is when an organism cannot produce its own food and must obtain nutrients by consuming other organisms, like animals that consume plants or other animals.
Euglenoids can obtain nutrients through three primary methods: photosynthesis, heterotrophy, and mixotrophy. They possess chloroplasts that allow them to photosynthesize, converting sunlight into energy. Additionally, they can absorb organic compounds from their environment (heterotrophy) or utilize both methods simultaneously (mixotrophy), depending on environmental conditions. This versatility allows them to thrive in various ecosystems.
Almost exclusively autotrophic. Very few plants combine autotrophy with some heterotrophy; Venus Fly Traps and the like.
Heterotroph, they cannot make their own food and thus must eat autotrophs (like plants) or other heterotrophs to survive.
well what happens is plants is heterotrophy meaning they make or produce their own food
Animals within the Animalia kingdom do not make their own food. Instead, they obtain nutrients by consuming other organisms or organic matter. This process is known as heterotrophy.
Penguins belong to the Animalia kingdom because they are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms, which are the defining characteristics of this kingdom. Penguins also exhibit other traits common to animals, such as heterotrophy, movement, and a lack of cell walls.
Heterotroph, autotrophs can create their own food (plants and some bacteria). Heterotrophs consume other organisms to aquire their energy and much energy is lost between each level.
Psychrophiles make their energy through photosynthesis (like plants), lithotrophy, which this uses inorganic compounds to produce energy and to this day is understood to be exclusive to microorganisms, and heterotrophy, meaning they consume other microorganisms or other forms of organic matter.
Protists can exhibit both autotrophic and heterotrophic modes of nutrition. Some protists are autotrophic, meaning they can produce their own food through photosynthesis, while others are heterotrophic, feeding on organic matter produced by other organisms.