No, a deer is not a decomposer. A deer is a consumer; a herbivore. It eats twigs and leaves and any other flora it can reach. Decomposers are organisms that eat away at dead materials, such as fungi eating away at the soil or deceased animal bodies.
No, a deer is not a decomposer. A deer is a consumer; a herbivore. It eats twigs and leaves and any other flora it can reach. Decomposers are organisms that eat away at dead materials, such as fungi eating away at the soil or deceased animal bodies.
no a deer is not a decomposer because a decomposer is a organism that breaks down dead matter a deer would be a consumer because it can not make its on food and it eats producers
All deer species are consumers
All deer species are consumers
Deer and elk are consumers
a deer cannot make its own food with natural indrediants like water,air,minerals etc.so it is not a producer.a deer eats plants,grass,etc so it is a consumer.a deer cannot breakdown dead and decaying matter into basic organic matter so it is not a decomposer
consumer. producers produce aka plants decomposer decompose aka bacteria and some more stuff
its a consumer....primary consumer
Elks are consumers.
gophers are consumers
Deer eat grasses and other green plants which make them a consumer called an herbivore. They are not decomposer since that is a job usually left to worms and bacteria.
a deer cannot make its own food with natural indrediants like water,air,minerals etc.so it is not a producer.a deer eats plants,grass,etc so it is a consumer.a deer cannot breakdown dead and decaying matter into basic organic matter so it is not a decomposer
Fungi and bacteria would eat a dead fox or any other animal that is deceased.
A sunflower is a producer. It is not a decomposer.