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Heterotrophic Nutrition A heterotroph is an organism that cannot synthesize its own food and is dependent on breaking down complex organic substances for nutrition 1 What types of feeders are there? Omnivores (omni-, all; -vore, eater) Omnivores • Omnivores eat Plant and animal material. • Omnivores cannot digest cellulose which is found in cell walls of plants. This goes through them undigested and is roughage. • Some insect omnivores are pollinators, so they are important to the life cycle of some plants. Large Omnivores Carnivores caro meaning 'meat' or 'flesh' and vorare meaning 'to devour') Carnivores • Carnivores feed on other animals. • They are secondary consumers Herbivores Herbivora or herba meaning a small plant or herb and vorare, to eat or devour Herbivorous Strategies • Herbivores have different strategies to break down cellulose. • ruminants have a large forestomachs which contain bacteria that ferment vegetation and break down cellulose. Examples of ruminants are cattle, sheep and deer. • Caudal fermentors, or cecal digestors have bacteria in their large intestine to allow digestion of cellulose through fermentation. Examples of cecal digestors include horses and rabbits. • See later in topic for details Feeding Mechanism Different animals use different strategies to feed Bulk Feeders Bulk feeders eat food in lumps or whole. • organisms have specialised teeth for the food they eat. Filter feeders • Filter feeders remove food that is suspended in water. • Baleen whales have comb like plates to sieve shrimp and small fish • Other fish like basking sharks have gill rakers to strain plankton from the water. • Fluid feeders • Many insects, some fish and mammals feed on fluids such as blood, plant sap or nectar. • Fluid feeders have specialised mouth parts • Deposit feeders • These feed by sifting through the substrate to find food. • Insects may burrow through detritus or dung • . • Benthic fish like catfish suck up mud and ingest the plant and animal material in it