Most animals are not scavengers. Scavengers include vultures, hyenas, and catfish. Most animals are herbivores (horses, sheep, rabbits, pandas) while others are carnivores, such as lions, tigers, and alligators. Some, like bears, can be omnivores, consuming both plants and animals.
scavengers are kind of like "nature's vacuum". they feed on the remains of dead animals and the remains that other animals have left behind. Most scavengers are omnivores that will eat any plant/meat remains that contain some nutritional value, ( such as lobsters who feed on anything from small fish to seaweed and plankton)...but many are strictly carnivorous eating only animal remains...(such as the vulture).
Scientists have not yet come up with a collective name for ocelots.
These animals are called scavengers or carrion eaters. Hyenas, vultures and arctic fox are all scavengers.Animals that further break down the remains are called decomposers or saprotrophs. These are usually bacteria or actinomycetes, or plants like fungi.
ocelots generlly weigh about 22 to 35 pounds
no, they are omnivores, they eat both plants and meat!
Yes, most scavengers are omnivores, meaning they eat both plant and animal matter. They feed on a variety of food sources depending on what is available in their environment. Examples of scavengers include vultures, raccoons, and some species of insects.
some are parasite and some are scavengers
They are mostly herbivores. Some are carnivores Some are omnivores Some are herbivores
No, they don't.
herbivores, omnivores, scavengers, and carnivores
Herbivores. They eat plants.
ocelots, jaguars
Zebras are herbivores, primarily grazing on grasses, leaves, and shrubs. They do not eat meat, which means they are neither omnivores nor scavengers. Their diet is specifically adapted to their natural habitats in the savannas and grasslands of Africa.
They can be herbivores, or omnivores. Herbivores= Vegetarian Omnivores= eats both plants and meat
Hawks are predators and carnivores.
No. Plecos are omnivores and scavengers by nature.