Want this question answered?
it is a carnivore
It is animal remains so it is a omnivore as it eats the remains of everything but it is also a decomposed also decomposer is a subcategory and cannot be compared to a herbivore. A omnivore eats meat and plants so the dung beetle is a omnivore but it is also a decomposer
It depends on which beetle you are talking about a ladybird is a carnivore, feeding on aphids and similar insects and occasionally even resorting to cannibalism. The Japanese beetle is an herbivore, feeding on various leaves.
Omnivore, I believe. I haven't seen them in the process of doing it, but they are also known as the "caterpillar hunter." What I have seen is large multiples of them swarming fig trees and eating up these fruits. The one I found recently however is rejecting the peaches and plums I have in my fridge so my guess is they are specialists over the meats/plants they consume
Yes, it is a carnivore.
it is a carnivore
It is animal remains so it is a omnivore as it eats the remains of everything but it is also a decomposed also decomposer is a subcategory and cannot be compared to a herbivore. A omnivore eats meat and plants so the dung beetle is a omnivore but it is also a decomposer
It depends on which beetle you are talking about a ladybird is a carnivore, feeding on aphids and similar insects and occasionally even resorting to cannibalism. The Japanese beetle is an herbivore, feeding on various leaves.
Bees are neither a omnivore nor a decomposer they are polinators. They drink the nector from flowers and transfer the pollon for plant to plant helping the plant to reproduce.
No.They eat mostly baby mice and various species of Spiders.
Is dung beetle a producer or consumer or decomposer
Omnivore, I believe. I haven't seen them in the process of doing it, but they are also known as the "caterpillar hunter." What I have seen is large multiples of them swarming fig trees and eating up these fruits. The one I found recently however is rejecting the peaches and plums I have in my fridge so my guess is they are specialists over the meats/plants they consume
Yes, it is a carnivore.
The blister beetle is not an omnivore. Instead it is a herbivores which means that eats only plants and grass.
Some are omnivores, eating both plants and animals. Species like the Leaf Beetle, Longhorn Beetles and Weevils feed on only plants, whereas species such as Ground Beetles and Rove Beetles are carnivores.
no it is not
Is dung beetle a producer or consumer or decomposer