Yes, Norwegian rats are most commonly secondary consumers. This is because it is an omnivorous. But, if it consumes plants, then it may be considered as a primary consumer.
Because, animals that eat other animals
i think hawks are tertiary because they eat secondary consumers
Usually a secondary consumer is a carnivore. They prey on primary consumers. Primary consumers eat vegetation.
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.
Yes, a maple tree produces its own food and there for is a primary consumer, anything that eats the maple tree would be a secondary consumer.
Rats are primary consumers. This means they will eat almost everything. In the wild, primary consumers provide nutrition for secondary consumers.
Usually. They are secondary consumers when they eat herbivores (rabbits, Gazelles), and tertiary consumers if they eat other carnivores, such as rats and Birds of Prey.
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.
Usually. They are secondary consumers when they eat herbivores (rabbits, gazelles), and tertiary consumers if they eat other carnivores, such as rats and birds of prey.
Secondary consumers are organisms that consume primary consumers. Primary consumers are organisms that eat primary producers, which are usually photosynthetic plants, protists, and bacteria. Primary consumers are always considered herbivores. Secondary consumers are usually carnivores, but they can also be omnivores. For example, while rats eat grain, they are secondary consumers, because they sometimes eat herbivorous insects. A frog can be a secondary consumer because it eats grass-eating crickets.
Rats usually eat grain so they are primary consumers.
A rattlesnake is generally considered a secondary consumer, sometimes a tertiary.
No, because in the food chain a secondary consumer is a carnivore that feeds only upon herbivores. Rats eat nuts, seeds, berries, human scraps, and they hunt insects, small frogs, and other tiny critters. So, that doesn't make them a secondary consumer. I hope this helps!
Secondary consumers are herbivores that feed on primary consumers.
primary consumers are herbivores and secondary consumers are carnivores so secondary consumers eat primary consumers
Secondary Consumers eat other primary consumers. Primary consumers eat plants or producers.
primary consumers are the consumers which feed upon the producers secondary consumers are the consumers which feed upon the primary consumers tertiary consumers are the consumers which feed upon the secondary consumers