Yes and no, without them there would be no life because primary consumers would die without food, and then secondary consumers and so forth. However secondary consumers don't feed directly from the producers so they are not all the food in that sense.
yes
YES!
The trophic level that contains the organisms that are the source of all chemical energy used in an ecosystem is called the producer level. This level contains the organisms that can make their own food.
the producers are important to all ecosystem because producers are plants and they make food by their selves and animals eat those to produce energy for it self.
An organism that is the source of all food in an ecosystem is called a producer. A consumer gets its energy by feeding on other organisms.
Producers somehow affect - whether directly or indirectly - every organism in their ecosystem. All producers make their own food - either through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, and the consumers of the ecosystem eat the producers, and other consumers eat those consumers, and eventually every organism in that ecosystem has consumed producers.
The producers are the plants (mostly autotrophs) that create the organic molecules that ultimately provide all of the chemical energy for the food chain.
The producers are the plants (mostly autotrophs) that create the organic molecules that ultimately provide all of the chemical energy for the food chain.
Explain how producers consumers and decomposers all have an ecosystem support the population within it
The ecosystem is where we live, our environment, containing our sustinence and our shelter. I believe you phrased the question wrong, ecosystem isnt located in one particular place, there is no source it's all around us.
The three energy roles in an ecosystem are producers, consumers, and decomposers. ;)
If all herbivores are killed in an ecosystem ultimately all life will die because there is no food source for carnivores