Consumers
No they are decomposers and producers.
Corals are both producers (they have symbiotic plants living in them) and consumers (herbivores/carnivores) as they filter feed on plankton.
Okay, so plankton are the producers in the chain, every fish that eats the plankton are primary consumers. Every other fish, such as a shark, that eats the fish that ate the plankton are secondary consumers
the producers make life possible for the consumers. Such as plants, insects, and plankton.
No, krill are primary consumers, they eat producers (phytoplankton).
Dolphins are at a higher trophic level than plankton. Dolphins are consumers that feed on other organisms, while plankton are primary producers that form the base of the marine food chain.
Plankton in the ocean can be both a producer and a consumer. Phytoplankton are a type of plankton that perform photosynthesis and act as producers, while zooplankton are consumers that feed on phytoplankton and other organisms. There are also some plankton species that can act as decomposers, breaking down organic matter in the ocean.
animals are consumers and plants are producers.
Other bugs or animals that are first level consumers or producers(grass,plants,plankton,ect).
they are both consumers and producers
consumers and producers
Seashells are not producers, consumers, or decomposers. They are actually the exoskeletons of marine mollusks, such as snails, clams, and oysters. These mollusks are typically consumers, as they feed on algae, plankton, and other small organisms. Seashells themselves do not play an active role in the food chain but serve as protection for the mollusk inside.