dung beetle are dicomposer because the eat poop (peces) and they get that from all types of organisms and poop is dead stuff
Rabbits are herbivores. They eat plants, not beetles.
The blister beetle is not an omnivore. Instead it is a herbivores which means that eats only plants and grass.
Dung beetles are not carnivores or herbivores. They are detritivores, feeding primarily on dung and decaying organic matter. Their diet consists mainly of animal feces, which they use for nutrition and reproduction.
It depends on which beetle you are talking about a ladybird is a carnivore, feeding on aphids and similar insects and occasionally even resorting to cannibalism. The Japanese beetle is an herbivore, feeding on various leaves.
Rhinoceros beetles are herbivores, meaning they primarily feed on plant material such as fruits, sap, and wood. They do not consume other animals.
Not on purpose. Tapir are herbivores. They eat leaves, fallen fruit, buds, and twigs. If a beetle gets mixed in there, I don't know if they spit it out or swallow it.
i did a project on a meadow ecosystem project & this is some things i got:grasshoper,beetle,butterfly,& a bunny.I hope this helps
Tortoise beetles typically feed on plant leaves, preferring members of the nightshade family such as tomatoes, potatoes, and eggplants. They are known to be herbivores, consuming foliage as their primary food source.
I think Africa has the most poisonous grub called the ''Bushman arrow-poison beetle.'' This beetle grub is used to poison Arrow tips and the poison can kill large herbivores by only penetrating the skin.The beetles are found at the roots of the 'African myrrh'
any organism that is not an autotroph or detritivore must be a parasite. include animals feeding on plants (herbivores). Herbivores don't fit in very well to classification of macroparasites and predators (microparasites work the same way for plants and animals, and there are no plant parasitoids). Herbivory as a form of parasitism. Both beetle and giraffe benefit from an interaction with the tree (b) The tree suffers from the feeding of both the beetle and the giraffe i) the beetle is small, with fast population growth, and the host harbors many individuals (macroparasite). ii) the giraffe doesn't fit into our categories of macroparasite or predator at all because it does not live in the tree.
any organism that is not an autotroph or detritivore must be a parasite. include animals feeding on plants (herbivores). Herbivores don't fit in very well to classification of macroparasites and predators (microparasites work the same way for plants and animals, and there are no plant parasitoids). Herbivory as a form of parasitism. Both beetle and giraffe benefit from an interaction with the tree (b) The tree suffers from the feeding of both the beetle and the giraffe i) the beetle is small, with fast population growth, and the host harbors many individuals (macroparasite). ii) the giraffe doesn't fit into our categories of macroparasite or predator at all because it does not live in the tree.
they are clearly herbivors because they eat plants and other grass type things