A photoautotroph gets its energy initially from light, and its carbon from carbon dioxide.
Cheamoheterotrops
Photoautotroph
photoautotroph
Phytoplankton, or any other single celled organism which produces its energy directly from the sun.
In ecosystems, carbon refers to the element that cycles through living organisms and the environment, playing a key role in processes like photosynthesis and respiration. Energy, on the other hand, is the ability to do work and is transferred through trophic levels in an ecosystem via food chains. Both carbon and energy are essential for the functioning of ecosystems, but while carbon cycles, energy flows through ecosystems.
Cheamoheterotrops
Bacillus subtilis is not a photoautotroph.
Photoautotroph
The energy source for a photoautotroph is sunlight. Through the process of photosynthesis, photoautotrophs convert sunlight into chemical energy to produce organic molecules such as glucose, which serves as the primary source of energy for the organism.
photoautotroph
The root word "photo" in "photoautotroph" likely refers to light. Therefore, a photoautotroph is an organism that can produce its own food using light as an energy source.
Phytoplankton, or any other single celled organism which produces its energy directly from the sun.
e. chemoautotroph-nh3. Chemoautotrophs use inorganic chemicals such as H2S or NH3 as an energy source, not NH3.
photoautotroph
Phototroph or photoautotroph...basically plants and photosynthetic bacteria
Amoebae are heterotrophic, meaning they must eat other organisms to survive.
Carbon dioxide levels influence how many sugars(glucose) a plant can produce greatly. This is because 6 molecules of water and 6 molecules of carbon dioxide will release a sugar through series of reactions. So if you have many carbon dioxide molecules it makes it a lot easier for a plant or any other photoautotroph.