- Nutrition can be defined as the process by which an
organism obtains food that is used to provide energy and materials for its
life sustaining activities
- There are basically two modes of nutrition:
- Autotrophic
- Heterotrophic
- Autotrophic Nutrition
Organisms which synthesize their own food are called the autotrophs and the process is called autotrophic nutrition. They include all green plants and some bacteria such as the nitrifying bacteria.
- Autotrophs are classified as:
Organisms that synthesise, food with the help of the light energy of the sun, carbon dioxide and water by a process called photosynthesis are called photoautotrophic organisms.
For example:
Cyanobacteria (blue-green bacteria, prokaryotes), algae and all green plants.
Organisms which synthesise food with the help of chemical energy are called chemotrophic organisms. Examples of chemosynthetic bacteria are nitrifying bacteria such as Nitrobacter and Nitrosomonas, hydrogen bacteria and iron bacteria.
- Heterotrophic nutrition is the process of obtaining
the food from other organisms
- Heterotrophic nutrition is broadly classified as holozoic, saprotrophic
and symbiotic
- Holozoic nutrition involves the taking in of solid particles of food. It involves ingestion of food, its digestion, absorption and assimilation.
- Saprotrophic nutrition is the process by which the organisms feed on dead and decaying matter. Examples of saprophytes are Rhizopus (bread mould), Mucor (pin mould), Yeast, Agaricus (mushroom), many bacteria etc.
Examples of saprozoans are Mastigamoeba and Chilomonas.
- Symbiosis is the association of two dissimilar organisms. The association may be mutually beneficial (mutualism), benefiting one organism and harming another (parasitism) and benefiting one but having no effect on the other (commensalism).
- Parasitism is defined as an association between individuals of two
different species which is beneficial to one and generally harmful to
another
- The different types of nutrition put the different organisms under three categories:
- Producers
- Consumers
- Decomposers
- Photosynthesis is the most important life sustaining process of nature.
It can be essentially summarised as follows:
Carbon dioxide + water
Glucose + Oxygen
- In higher plants, the leaves along with the chloroplasts are considered the photosynthetic apparatus of the plant. Certain young regions may, however, contain chlorophyll. However, in the lower plants like algae, the entire plant body contains the pigments. The exchange of gases and uptake of water takes place through the general surface of the plant body.
- Factors affecting photosynthesis are light intensity,
carbon dioxide concentration, temperature, chlorophyll concentration, water
and pollution
- All animals are heterotrophic. Holozoic nutrition is most common among all types / methods of heterotrophism.
Holozoic nutrition involves the following steps:
- Ingestion - Taking in of food or eating
- Digestion - breaking down food into simpler forms. Digestion is both mechanical and chemical. The digestion may take place outside cells (extracellular) or within the cells (intracellular).
- Absorption - Taking in of food in the soluble forms into the tissues. The absorption may be passive (without the use of energy) or active(uses energy).
- Assimilation - Utilisation of the nutrients for the various functions
- Egestion - Removal of undigested or waste matter is called egestion
- Nutrition in amoeba is holozoic. The food is ingested at the point where it comes in touch with the cell surface with the help of pseudopodia.
- Digestion in amoeba is intracellular and with the help of lysosomal
enzymes
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