Vultures are scavengers. If a tortoise tried to be Frogger, wandered across a busy road, and became roadkill, then the vultures would probably chow down on the little guy. I'm just saying..
well sharks birds seagulls large fish
Yes they do.
Pigs
The rarest animal in the world today is a giant tortoise, which lives in the Galapagos Islands. Black rats have overrun the islands and they eat the eggs and the young.
Tortoises, rabbits, hares, many small rodents, deer, antelope, bison, elk and sheep all eat grass in the desert.
There is a marine animal called the Infinite Jellyfish. It will live forever unless a predator comes and eats it. Tortoises and sea turtles live very long as well... as long at 200 years (at least)
Ummmm, yeah. Heterotrophs means that the animal eats other animals or plants. Consumers are basically things that need to eat and that's practically every single living thing excluding the plants. So, yes, tortoises are both consumers and heterotrophs.
An animal that eats plants is called a Herbivore. A carnivore is an animal that eats meat.
Javelina, antelope, desert bighorn sheep. tortoises and some rodents will feed on the prickly pear especially in times of drought when few other plants are available.
Galapagos Tortoises are reptiles.
None. Every animal either eats plants, or eats another animal that eats plants, or eats another animal that eats another animal that eats plants.
In the galapagos island tortoises eat opuntia cactus.
An omnivore is an animal that eats both plants and meat. A carnivore is an animal that just eats meat. A herbivore is an animal that eats just plants.
camels