Almost all animals are consumers. Only plants and some protists produce their own food from light. Decomposers break down dead tissue - fungi, bacteria, certain insects and snails are considered decomposers. Foxes are mammals so they are consumers.
Cuncumers
Yes, foxes are consumers. All animals are consumers. Only plants are producers.
Cougars are consumers. Only plants are producers and only bacteria and fungi are decomposers.
They are all required to drive the carbon/energy cycle.
No, only plants are producers. Foxes are consumers, in such that they have to actively hunt for and look for food.
No, they are not primary producers. Depending on the food chain, they would be a secondary consumer. A primary producer would be grass or trees.
In an ecosystem, producers are typically plants and other photosynthetic organisms that convert sunlight into energy. Primary consumers are herbivores that eat these producers, such as rabbits or deer. Secondary consumers are carnivores that feed on primary consumers, like foxes or hawks. This food chain illustrates the flow of energy from producers to consumers at different trophic levels.
consumers , and decomposers are related by a decomposer eating a dead organism that has died recently and that consumer ate a producer to pass on the energy needed to an organism....
consumers take in food by eating producers or other consumers. Examples include foxes, elephants, sharks, humans, cows and venus fly traps
All animals are consumers. Only plants can be producers. Only fungi and bacteria can be true decomposes. A shrew is an animal.
All animals are consumers. Only plants can be producers. Only fungi and bacteria can be true decomposes. A caterpillar is an animal.
Producers capture energy and stores it in food. Consumers get their energy by eating other organisms. Decomposers decomposes the consumers, producers and waste materials to products that are again useful for producers. Thus, consumers do not actually have a role, while producers and decomposers do.