No, animals do not possess the ability to photosynthesize. This process is exclusive to plants, algae, and some bacteria.
No, animals cannot photosynthesize. Photosynthesis is a process that only plants, algae, and some bacteria can perform, using sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into energy. Animals obtain energy by consuming other organisms or organic matter.
Plants provide food and shelter for animals, and as they photosynthesize, regulate the levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. As food producers, plants are eaten by herbivores, which in turn become food for the omnivores and carnivores. Plants are also the homes of many animals, small and big. Plants provide shelter from predators and harsh factors of the environment, like the hot sun, cold snow and torrential rain. When plants photosynthesize, they take in carbon dioxide and give out the fresh oxygen that all the animals need for respiration. Plants are crucial for the health of all animals. On the other hand, plants depend on animals for nutrients, pollination and seed dispersal, and as the animals consume plants, they regulate the numbers of different species of plants. While plants provide oxygen for the animals as they photosynthesize, animals respire and give out carbon dioxide for plants to make food with. It is an interdependent relationship here. This is not to say that plants do not respire themselves. They do, it is just that the amount of carbon dioxide they give out is not enough for the plants to make enough food with. As such, plants need animals. Also, when animals die, they decompose and become natural fertilizers for plants. Being pretty much immobile, plants also depend on animals to pollinate them for reproduction. And when the fertilized plants eventually produce seeds encased in fruits, animals eat them or carry them along on their fur, dispersing the seeds far and wide, ensuring the continuity of the plant species.
Many animals are known to avoid tobacco plants due to the toxic compounds they contain, such as nicotine. However, some animals like deer or insects may feed on tobacco plants in certain circumstances. It is important to note that tobacco is harmful to most animals and should not be intentionally fed to them.
The classification level for animals is generally more complex and detailed than that for plants. Animals are classified into 7 main levels: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. In contrast, plants are typically classified into 4 main levels: kingdom, division (or phylum), class, and order.
No, animals cannot photosynthesize. Photosynthesis is a process that only plants, algae, and some bacteria can perform, using sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into energy. Animals obtain energy by consuming other organisms or organic matter.
Autotrophs are plants that photosynthesize so any animal would not be an autotroph.
true animals are animals that look like animals, think like animals walk like animals and are animals
Onions themselves are root bulbs, and so cannot photosynthesize. Keeping that in mind, onion leaves and the sprouting plant from the onion bulb CAN photosynthesize like all other leaved plants. Hope this helps! Daniel A
Plants provide food and shelter for animals, and as they photosynthesize, regulate the levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. As food producers, plants are eaten by herbivores, which in turn become food for the omnivores and carnivores. Plants are also the homes of many animals, small and big. Plants provide shelter from predators and harsh factors of the environment, like the hot sun, cold snow and torrential rain. When plants photosynthesize, they take in carbon dioxide and give out the fresh oxygen that all the animals need for respiration. Plants are crucial for the health of all animals. On the other hand, plants depend on animals for nutrients, pollination and seed dispersal, and as the animals consume plants, they regulate the numbers of different species of plants. While plants provide oxygen for the animals as they photosynthesize, animals respire and give out carbon dioxide for plants to make food with. It is an interdependent relationship here. This is not to say that plants do not respire themselves. They do, it is just that the amount of carbon dioxide they give out is not enough for the plants to make enough food with. As such, plants need animals. Also, when animals die, they decompose and become natural fertilizers for plants. Being pretty much immobile, plants also depend on animals to pollinate them for reproduction. And when the fertilized plants eventually produce seeds encased in fruits, animals eat them or carry them along on their fur, dispersing the seeds far and wide, ensuring the continuity of the plant species.
Chihuahuas, cacti, normal Mexico stuff like snakes and desert type animals.
No, animals are not characterized by photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is a process only found in plants, algae, and some bacteria, where they use sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into energy-rich molecules. Animals, on the other hand, obtain energy by consuming other organisms.
no
Phytoplankton are neither plants nor animals. Phytoplankton are similar to plants, in that they contain chlorophyll and photosynthesize. However, phytoplankton are not in the plant kingdom. Rather, the term phytoplankton is used to describe any photosynthetic organism that drifts in the ocean (that is, they do not swim fast enough to control where they are in the ocean and are at the whim of the currents). Included in the phytoplankton are photosynthetic bacteria ("cyanobacteria") and photosynthetic single-celled eukaryotes. Photosynthetic organisms that are not plants can be referred to collectively as "algae".
Animals usually don't hurt plants because they just use the plants to eat, or use the plants to build there own homes.Besides that animals really don't have any reason to destroy plants
Rabbits, Deer, Mooses, any common herbivore... even scavengers like foxes and raccoons eat plants sometimes...
any where that can support plants or animals