i dont know if i know i will ask yo0u....
Venus flytrap and pitcher plant are examples of autotrophic plants that also exhibit a heterotrophic mode of nutrition by capturing and digesting insects for additional nutrients in nutrient-poor environments.
Plants that cannot prepare their own food are called heterotrophic plants. These plants rely on other organisms for their nutrition, such as fungi in the case of mycoheterotrophic plants or host plants in the case of parasitic plants. Examples include Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora) and dodder (Cuscuta spp.).
A fungus differs from green plants in that it does not make its own food through photosynthesis. Instead, fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain nutrients by absorbing dissolved organic matter from their environment.
Fungi are heterotrophic, meaning they obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter, while green plants are autotrophic and produce their own food through photosynthesis. Fungi do not contain chlorophyll, which is responsible for capturing sunlight energy in green plants. Additionally, fungi reproduce through spores, whereas green plants produce seeds for reproduction.
No, carrots do not engage in photosynthesis. They are heterotrophic plants, meaning they obtain their energy and nutrients from the soil through their roots rather than through photosynthesis like autotrophic plants.
all green plants have autotrophic mode of nutrition as they make their own food and animals have heterotrophic mode of nutrition as they depend on other organisms and plants for their food
Venus flytrap and pitcher plant are examples of autotrophic plants that also exhibit a heterotrophic mode of nutrition by capturing and digesting insects for additional nutrients in nutrient-poor environments.
The Venus flytrap is both heterotrophic and autotrophic.
The kind of nutrition in which an organism prepares its own food and does not depend on other organisms. Such type of nutrition is found in green plants having Chlorophyll, To manufacture their own food in the presence of sunlight. Just contrating to this are Heterotrophs (Heterotrophic nutrition), which depend on green plants or other organisms for food. Autotrophic nutrition provides food for the whole of the living world.
They depend on other living organisms for their nutrition .and it depends on their mode of nutrition...
They are called heterotrophic plants, such as Indian pipe or ghost plant. They lack chlorophyll and cannot photosynthesize, so they rely on other plants or animals for nutrition. These plants are often found in low light environments like forests.
maby a diferent type of chlorifie
Synthesize glucose
Plants that cannot prepare their own food are called heterotrophic plants. These plants rely on other organisms for their nutrition, such as fungi in the case of mycoheterotrophic plants or host plants in the case of parasitic plants. Examples include Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora) and dodder (Cuscuta spp.).
Fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain nutrients through absorption, while green plants are autotrophic and perform photosynthesis to make their own food. Fungi do not contain chlorophyll, which is essential for photosynthesis in green plants. Additionally, fungi have cell walls made of chitin, while green plants have cell walls made of cellulose.
glucose. this is made when plants transform the suns energy to sugar during the process of photosynhesis
A fungus differs from green plants in that it does not make its own food through photosynthesis. Instead, fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain nutrients by absorbing dissolved organic matter from their environment.