connsumer
No, the giant kangaroo rat eats grass and seeds.
A rat is a consumer, not a producer or decomposer. Most animals are consumers.
A rat is a consumer, not a producer or decomposer. Most animals are consumers.
A rat is a consumer, not a producer or decomposer. Most animals are consumers.
No, the giant kangaroo rat eats grass and seeds.
connsumer
The Kangaroo is the Primary Consumer. So it works like this... Grass Kangaroo Dingo This is an example of a food chain. The Grass is eaten by the Kangaroo which is eaten by the Dingo. The Grass is the Primary Producer, the Kangaroo is the Primary Consumer and the Dingo is the Secondary Consumer. Hope that helps xx
A kangaroo is a consumer, as they are grazers. A producer is an organism that would create its own food. E.g., a plant. A consumer is an organism that consumers another. E.g. a kangaroo or a lion. A decomposer is a an organism that would consume the decaying matter of another organism. This includes saprotrophs, which live on their food. E.g. a fungus.
The kangaroo rat of North America is a consumer. It cannot be a producer as it is not a plant; it cannot be a decomposer because it is neither bacteria nor fungi; it is not a parasite because it does not feed entirely off another plant or animal's system.
Since all producers are green (at least some parts of them are), a kangaroo can not be a producer. It eats producers and that makes it a consumer.
yes the kangaroo rat is endangered
No. The kangaroo rat is not a pouched mammal, or marsupial. The kangaroo rat is completely unrelated to the marsupil known as the kangaroo; nor is it related to the rat-kangaroo, the smaller species of kngaroos.