No, a turtle is not an autotroph. Turtles are heterotrophs, meaning they cannot produce their own food and instead obtain energy by consuming plants, other animals, or both. Autotrophs, like plants, produce their own food through processes like photosynthesis. Turtles rely on external sources of food for their nutritional needs.
All the pathogenic bacteria or for that purpose all the bacteria are heterotrophs.
iortoise is a turtle who lives on the land
No, a turtle is a reptile.
YourMother Turtle
turtle turtle turtle
# green turtle # box turtle # wood turtle # stinkpot turtle
aligator snapping turtle
a turtle
The biggest turtle is the Leatherback Turtle.
a musk turtle or a eastern pained turtle
Some of the different baby turtle species found in the wild include the loggerhead turtle, green sea turtle, hawksbill turtle, leatherback turtle, and Kemp's ridley turtle.
the male turtle has a longer tail than the female turtle. the female turtle is always larger than the male turtle..