You would need a base first-- what do insects eat?
You'd then need snails, worms, small fish, and some aquatic plants.
Then crayfish.
Then salamander and frogs.
Then Beavers - they eat trees, bark, certain aquatic plants.
I think you're missing something for raccoon... might want to look that up.
Insects must have a head, thorax, and abdomen. They have three pairs of legs and usually two pairs of wings. The crayfish obviously doesn't have wings, (not sure about the other requirements) so it is not an insect.
Crayfish of what I have seen in the wild and done myself caterpillars will fall in the water and be eaten and in my tank I feed my crayfish meal worms
they eat small insects and larvae
It feeds on annelid worms and insect larvae, freshwater shrimps, and yabbies (freshwater crayfish).
No. Platypuses feed only on tiny invertebrates such as insect larvae, crayfish and annelid worms.
Vegetation, snails, small fish, insect larvae, worms and tadpoles.
The frog is the prey. The raccoon is the predator. Raccoons can be both prey and predators as well as frogs that feed on insect prey. We call that a food chain.
No they do not eat meat. A Platypus is a carnivore. Its diet consists mainly of shrimp, crayfish, insect larvae and worms.
It keeps the insect population in check and provides a meal for larger animals who cannot survive on small animals.
No. Platypuses do not eat fruit. They are carnivores, feeding entirely on freshwater invertebrates such as crayfish, insect larvae and annelid worms.
Platypuses eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae of caddisflies, mayflies and two-winged flies, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.
The diet of a black salamander can include lots of things like worms, slugs, snails, spiders, centipedes and other insect. They are carnivores.