chloroplast
chloroplast
Primary producer
No, frogs are not autotrophic. They are heterotrophic organisms, meaning they obtain their energy and nutrients by consuming other organisms.
No, not all cells are autotrophic. Autotrophic cells are able to produce their own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, while heterotrophic cells rely on consuming other organisms for nutrients. Both types of cells are found in living organisms.
chloroplast
Autotrophic organisms are animals or plants that can create their own energy from the Sun. The organelle most common in these organisms are chloroplasts.
chloroplast
The organelle that you would expect to find in a plant cell but not animal cell is the centrosomes.
Primary producer
No, frogs are not autotrophic. They are heterotrophic organisms, meaning they obtain their energy and nutrients by consuming other organisms.
MITOCHONDRIA
No, not all cells are autotrophic. Autotrophic cells are able to produce their own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, while heterotrophic cells rely on consuming other organisms for nutrients. Both types of cells are found in living organisms.
No, heterotrophs were not the first living organisms. It is believed that autotrophic organisms, capable of producing their own food through processes like photosynthesis, likely appeared before heterotrophs that rely on consuming other organisms for nutrition.
Autotrophic organisms are essential for producing organic molecules through photosynthesis, which heterotrophic organisms rely on as a source of food. Without autotrophs converting sunlight into energy, there would be a lack of primary production that supports the entire food chain, ultimately leading to the collapse of heterotrophic life.
Chloroplast
Archaebacteria