whoever wrote the first answer has no life and no they are not producers.
Well its a Consumer that eats the Producers I guess. Also the Second-level consumers eat the First-level consumers and the Producers The Third-level consumers eat the Second-level consumers,First-level consumers and the Producers which is the Decomposers the plants and the Sun
no
first level consumers
The food chain goes Producer > Primary > Secondary > Tertiary Primary consumers eat producers, which are organisms that use photosynthesis to produce energy. Do not let people tell you that only plants go through photosynthesis. Cyanobacteria and algae do as well. And no, algae is not a plant.
In an ecosystem, energy flows from producers to consumers through trophic levels. If producers provide 1500 calories of energy to first-level consumers (herbivores), these consumers typically convert only about 10% of that energy into biomass, passing approximately 150 calories to the second-level consumers (carnivores). Following the same efficiency, the second-level consumers would then pass about 15 calories to the third-level consumers, which are the apex predators. Thus, the third-level consumers receive a significantly reduced amount of energy due to the energy loss at each trophic level.
This is primary consumers. They are the second level of the food pyramid.
They get eaten by first level consumers otherwise known as herbivores. The herbivores have digestive systems capable of using/digesting the sugars polymers in the plant's tissues.
Level 1. The levels include producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers.
A bighorn sheep is a pomary consumer because they eat the producers. Primary consumers are herbivores that eat the first tropic level vegetation. Plants are the first tropic level producers.
The food pyramid begins with producers (plants) on the first level, it then goes to primary consumers (eat producers) on the second level, the third level is made up of secondary consumers and so on. All of these levels come together to make the food pyramid. There must be the most producers and the least top order consumers in order to maintain a balanced ecosystem.
First-level consumers, also known as primary consumers, are organisms that directly feed on producers, typically herbivores that consume plants or algae. In contrast, third-level consumers, or tertiary consumers, are organisms that eat secondary consumers, which may be carnivores or omnivores. This hierarchical structure demonstrates the flow of energy through an ecosystem, with first-level consumers forming the base and third-level consumers occupying higher trophic levels.
The wolf is a second level consumer. This means that the wolf feeds on the primary producers, and is prey for the first level consumer.