Wolves are secondary consumers, humans, then lower carnivores, then come the herbavores, and on the bottom is producers aka plants
Yes, Arctic wolves are secondary consumers. In the wild, Arctic wolves' primarily prey on muskoxen and Arctic hares. They have also been found to prey on lemmings, Arctic foxes, birds and beetles.
it's a tertiary consumer which are carnivores or meat eaters secondary consumers and omnivores or animals that eat both plants and other animals.
Animals that eat first level/primary consumers (ie the carnivor that eats herbivore or omnivores) A mosquitoe is a secondary consumer, as is the artic fox, wolves and polar bear.
yes tha are u stupid
wolves , bears and lynxes
There are Arctic Hares, Polar Bears, Arctic Foxes, Snowy Owls, Wolves, Plus many more!
Secondary consumers are animals that feed on primary consumers, such as mice, rats, rabbits, squirrels, deer, etc. Foxes, wolves, lions and tigers are secondary consumers.
A first level consumer is one that consumes producers (plants) directly. First level consumers in the tundra biome would include small herbivores such as lemmings and rabbits, and large grazers such as elk.
wolves, coyotes, foxes and any other wild canines are secondary consumers as well as cougars, bobcats, ocelots and other wilkd cats. Most lizards and snakes are also secondary consumers.
Secondary consumers eat herbivores, which are primary consumers. An example of this would be a lion that eats a zebra. The zebra is a herbivore and so the lion is a secondary consumer. Almost all carnivores are secondary consumers.
A coyote is a second order consumer because it eats first order consumers such as rabbits.
A Wolfe is a meat eater. Thoughe Wolfes and other canine are known to eat grass if they have dygestove problems