Terchiary
They are secondary consumers. It is sure that larger animals will eat them like sharks and seals.
A bald eagle is a secondary consumer, as it primarily feeds on smaller animals like fish, rodents, and other birds. Primary consumers are herbivores that feed directly on producers.
producer = grass primary consumer = grasshopper, rabbit secondary consumer = mouse tertiary consumer = snake, kookaburra top predator = eagle
A sea eagle is a secondary consumer. It primarily feeds on fish and other aquatic animals, which are considered primary consumers when they feed on producers like plants or phytoplankton. As a predator, the sea eagle occupies a higher trophic level in the food chain, relying on the energy transferred from primary consumers.
A primary consumer obtains its energy from producers (i.e. plants). Therefore a rabbit is a primary consumer because it eats grass and other plants. A secondary consumer eats primary consumers, therefore they do not get their energy directly from plants.The fox that eats the rabbit would be a secondary consumer.
In the food chain you provided, the primary consumer is the squirrel. The squirrel feeds on the oak tree, which is a producer. This positions the squirrel as the first consumer in the chain, while the owl and eagle are secondary and tertiary consumers, respectively, that prey on the squirrel.
An eagle is at least a secondary consumer if not a third level. They are called apex consumers.
Normally yes. It preys upon smaller birds/mammals which are mainly primary consumers such as rabbits and sparrows. In the case of the rabbit the eagle is always the secondary consumer as the rabbit eats grass which is a producer as it makes its own food from the sun. However, if the eagle preys upon creatures like ferrets or mink then it becomes a quaternerary consumer as these examples are tertiary consumers as they prey upon rabbits and other small mammals. Hope this helps.Yes.
Depending on what it eats it can be either. If an eagle eats a rat that ate a crop then it is a secondary consumer. If an eagle eats a cat that ate a rat that ate a crop it's a tertiary consumer. The higher up you get in the chain, the lower energy yield you get from the food, as 90% is lost as heat and only 10% is passed on for every level. i.e. 100% crop -> 10% rat -> 1% cat -> 0.1% eagle. the eagle only receives 0.1% of the energy. DDT and other poisonous chemicals accumulate as you go higher up the chain also.
Mabey
In the food chain involving an oak tree, squirrel, owl, and eagle, the consumers are the squirrel, owl, and eagle. The squirrel consumes the acorns from the oak tree, making it a primary consumer. The owl and eagle are both secondary consumers, preying on the squirrel. Thus, all three animals are consumers, with the squirrel being the primary and the owl and eagle as higher-level consumers.
I know the primary is 5651