Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Energy
transformations
- Autotrophs vs
Heterotrophs
- Autotrophs
- Self feeding
- Obtain organic compounds
by converting inorganic
molecules
- Carbon fixation
- Types of autotrophs
- Photosynthetic
autotrophs
- Organisms that obtain energy
required for carbon fixation through
sunlight
- All green plants are
photosynthetic, as well as
some protists like algae
- The chlorophyll in chloroplasts
makes the plants green
- Chemosynthetic
autotrophs
- Organisms that obtain energy required
for carbon fixation through inorganic chemical reactions
- Heterorophs
- Other feeders
- Obtain energy through consuming
other organisms or their products
- All animals and fungi
are heterotrophs
- Types of
heterotrophs
- Herbivores
- Only eat plants
- Carnivores
- Only eats animals
- Omnivores
- Eat a mixture of plants and
animals
- Don't specialise in a food
source
- Are opportunistic
eaters
- Means they eat whatever
they can
- Saprotrophs
- Most fungi and some
bacteria
- Eat by digesting organic
material by extraellular
methods
- Secrete enzymes onto material to break
them down and then absorb them through
endocytosis
- Parasites
- Derive energy and nutrients
from other living
oorganisms
- The host is usually
harmed/ killed
organisms
- Types of parasites
- Endoparasites
- Live inside the host
- Example: Tapeworrm, liver fluke
- Exoparasites
- Live outside the host
- Example: Ticks, lice
- Cellular respiration
- Energy = the ability to cause change
- Cells need energy to carry out their functions
- Energy exists in cells through chemical energy, which is
stored in the bonds that join atoms together
- When these these bonds are broken their
energy is released and stored in ATP
molecules