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yes
Neither. Algae is a plant, not an animal.
carnivore - eats flesh and meats omnivore - eats anythings available herbivore - eats herbs, shrubs, bush, and green plants.
Karen A. Bjorndal has written: 'Nutrition and grazing behavior of the green turtle, Chelonia mydas, a seagrass herbivore' -- subject(s): Green turtle, Sea turtles
Yes green turtles eat blue ringed octopus and Moon Jellyfish and others, but as a baby they are herbivores.
A common porcupine is a herbivore. They eat leaves, herbs, twigs, green plants (live clover), and in the winter they sometimes eat bark. It varies with what kind of porcupine you have.
Canada geese are primarily herbivores, although they sometimes eat small insects and fish. Their diet includes green vegetation and grains.
Marine sea turtles mostly eat fish and jelly fish. The green sea turtle is the only one who is a herbivore, eating mainly sea grass.
Well, algae is a producer but i am not sure if it is a herbivore, omnivore, or carnivore but i mould go with herbivore......
A green sea turtle is actually both because when baby green turtles are born, they eat crustaceans, mollusks, jellyfishes, and sponges for the first few months then when adults, they will avoid meat and move on to seaweed, sea grass, or marine algae.
From hatching to juvinile age a green sea turtle is a carnivore however a matured green sea turtles jaw has serrated points therefore as a adult it makes the transistion to herbivore and eats sea grass and algae
a carnivore would be an animal that eats meat and the carnivore in a food chain would depend on what animals are int the food changeFor example: if the animals in a food chain are snake leaves and mice the the snake would be the carnivore