The five types of consumers are, omnivore, herbivore, carnivore, scavenger, and detrivore/decomposer.
They do not use fossil fuels.
Answer:
nitrogen fixation, nitrification, denitrification, anammox, and ammonification
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer to your question is: C
Explanation:
A.) Plants digest sugars to make energy. This option is incorrect, the process in which plants digest sugars to make energy is called cellular respiration.
B.) Plants use oxygen and glucose to make carbon dioxide. This option is incorrect, photosynthesis doesn't make carbon dioxide, it use it to make sugar.
C.) Plants use sunlight and carbon dioxide to make sugars. This option is correct, photosynthesis is a process that use carbon dioxide to make sugars.
D.) Plants use sunlight to make chlorophyll and chloroplasts. This option is incorrect, plants use sunlight in the photosynthesis process to make sugars, not to make chlorophyll and chloroplasts.
Answer:
- <u>Eukaryotes</u> are organisms that contain more than one cell with membrane-bound organelles and a nucleus.
- Organisms that contain only one cell and do not contain a nucleus or membrane-bound organelles are known as <u>prokaryotes</u>.
Explanation:
According to their structural and functional complexity, organisms can be classified into eukaryotes and prokaryotes.
- <em><u>Eukaryotic organisms</u></em><em> are formed by cells that have a true nucleus -where DNA is located- and specialized structures called organelles, with a system of endomembranes that compartmentalize the intracellular space. These organisms are usually pluricellular, given the ability of eukaryotic cells to group together to form tissues.
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- <em><u>Prokaryotic organisms</u></em><em> are single cells, lacking a nucleus - genetic material is scattered in the cytoplasm - and do not possess organelles. The prokaryotic cells that form these organisms are incapable of binding together, so they do not form tissues.</em>
Some unicellular organisms are prokaryotic cells, like some parasitic microorganisms, such as amoebas.