Answer:
Almost all living things that are classified as plants carry out photosynthesis.
However, a very few plants do not. For example, the Indian pipe plant, Monotropa uniflora, contains no chlorophyll. Instead, the Indian pipe takes nutrients from a fungus. Indian pipes grow in areas of low light that tend to be rich in decaying plant matter. As a result, they have adapted to obtain nutrients from the fungi that digest the decaying pant matter.
This method of obtaining nutrients is a form of parasitism called myco-heterotrophy. There are several types of plants that live in similar low light conditions that have adapted to obtain nutrients in this way, including non-photosynthetic orchids and non-photosynthetic liverworts.PLEASE MARK ME AS BRAINLIEST