it has to be a omnivore right?
Yes. the organism can be able to eat the producer and the first consumer.
Producer- first order consumer- second order consumer- third order consumer etc
Second-order consumers feed on first-order consumers. An eagle is an example of a second-order consumer. Examples of first-order consumers are rabbits and mice.
depends where he is in line
Feeding on Secondary Consumers in an ecosystem will cause for you to be classified as a Tertiary Consumer (also known as a 3rd order consumer), and will be, by necessity, a carnivore. Another way to think of this is in trophic levels, where the producers will be of the First Trophic Level, standard herbivores of the second, the first-order carnivores for herbivores the third, and the organism defined by this question the fourth.
In the food chain, another name for a secondary consumer can be a second order consumer or second-level consumer. Secondary consumers are typically carnivores that eat first consumers. First consumers are herbivores.
no cayoty is a second order consumer
Feeding on Secondary Consumers in an ecosystem will cause for you to be classified as a Tertiary Consumer (also known as a 3rd order consumer), and will be, by necessity, a carnivore. Another way to think of this is in trophic levels, where the producers will be of the First Trophic Level, standard herbivores of the second, the first-order carnivores for herbivores the third, and the organism defined by this question the fourth.
three
A Highest order consumer is the top of the food chain. They are eaten by nothing and eat everything .
second-order consumer
A primary consumer is a heterotrophic organism that attains its energy by consuming producers (plants). A primary, or first order, consumer, will always b a herbivore, sicne a consumer by definition must consume other organisms.