no
Sharks primarily eat consumers, such as fish, seals, and other marine animals, rather than producers like plants or algae. Producers are at the base of the food chain and convert sunlight into energy, which is then consumed by herbivores and subsequently by carnivores like sharks. While sharks may indirectly rely on producers by consuming herbivores that eat them, they do not eat producers directly.
the producers would decrease in population as the herbivores which the sharks would have ate, would grow in population.
Herbivores that eat producers are known as primary consumers. These animals primarily feed on plants, algae, or other photosynthetic organisms as their main source of nutrition. Examples of primary consumers include rabbits, deer, and grasshoppers.
Carnivores depend on them because herbivores eat the producers and the carnivores eat the herbivores.
They are called scavengers.
Animals that eat only producers are known as herbivores. Herbivores obtain their energy by consuming plants, which are primary producers in the food chain. Examples of herbivores include cows, deer, and rabbits.
Herbivores are neither decomposers nor producers. Herbivores are organisms that consume plants for energy but do not play a role in breaking down dead organic matter (decomposers) or synthesizing food from sunlight (producers).
Herbivores are consumers in the ecosystem because they feed on producers (plants). They obtain their energy by consuming plants, and they are then consumed by predators in the food chain.
Of course only herbivores or vegetarians feed on producers.
The pyramid of numbers would be inverted, with more herbivores at the base than producers. This is because more herbivores are consuming the producers, leading to a higher number of herbivores compared to producers.
Is a herbivores
yep