No, corals are not decomposers. They are marine invertebrates that obtain nutrients through a symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae living in their tissues. Corals are considered primary producers in their ecosystems, as they rely on sunlight and plankton for their food.
Spirogyra is an example of an organism that is unicellular, colonial, filamentous, and photosynthetic.
Chloroplasts are the organelles that contain the photosynthetic pigments in plant cells.
Chlorophyll is the principal pigment in photosynthetic organisms that absorbs light energy for photosynthesis.
A non-example of a decomposer would be a predator that actively hunts and consumes other organisms for food without breaking down dead organic matter.
A decomposer
diatoms are producers, not decomposers. they are photosynthetic organisms
Lichen are a composite organism, made up of fungus and a photosynthetic partner. In the cycle of things in life, lichen is a decomposer, but it is also a producer.
Only some protozoa are decomposers as giant Amoeba . Most protozoa are saprotrophic , some parasitic and some photosynthetic .
No, corals are not decomposers. They are marine invertebrates that obtain nutrients through a symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae living in their tissues. Corals are considered primary producers in their ecosystems, as they rely on sunlight and plankton for their food.
A sunflower is a producer. It is not a decomposer.
A wallaby is not a decomposer. It is a consumer.
not photosynthetic
decomposer
decomposer or consumer (must of it is decomposer)
decomposer or consumer (must of it is decomposer)
decomposer or consumer (must of it is decomposer)