Yes they are. Protists can be Parameciums and Ameboas and they are heterotrophs.
Protists and fungi are both eukaryotic organisms, meaning they have a defined nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Additionally, both protists and fungi can be unicellular or multicellular in nature, and they obtain nutrients through absorption. Finally, both groups play vital ecological roles in various ecosystems, such as serving as decomposers or being part of important symbiotic relationships.
Animal-like protists are autotrophic, while plant-like protists are heterotrophic.
There are many ways in which protists are more advanced than bacteria. Protists possess a nucleus. Protists can also be unicellular or multicellular while bacteria is only unicellular.
Multicellular protists are grouped with unicellular protists because multicellular protists are very similar to unicellular protists. A protist is any organism that is not a plant, an animal, a fungus, or a prokaryote.
Yes they are. Protists can be Parameciums and Ameboas and they are heterotrophs.
Yes
The kingdom Animalia includes only multicellular heterotrophs.
A heterotroph
First of all, Protista is a kingdom, not a phylum. But there are over 24 Phyla in this kingdom. What makes protists different from other kingdoms is that they are unicellular, have a nucleus in their cells, they have no cell wall,, and they can be hetertrophs or autotrophs.
the answer is spores
Most of the members of Plantae are autotroph.
Protists and fungi are both eukaryotic organisms, meaning they have a defined nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Additionally, both protists and fungi can be unicellular or multicellular in nature, and they obtain nutrients through absorption. Finally, both groups play vital ecological roles in various ecosystems, such as serving as decomposers or being part of important symbiotic relationships.
Hetertrophs (or Husband)
Fungus-like protists, such as water molds and slime molds, resemble fungi in terms of their absorptive nutrition and similar body structures. Both groups use structures like hyphae to absorb nutrients from their surroundings and often play similar ecological roles in ecosystems. However, fungus-like protists are classified in different taxonomic groups than true fungi.
Protists
what are protists made of