A mosquito larvae is a consumer, but only at the most basic level. With regards to its trophic level, it is a primary consumer. With regards to its feeding habits, it is a filter feeder.
A mosquito larvae is a consumer, but only at the most basic level. With regards to its trophic level, it is a primary consumer. With regards to its feeding habits, it is a filter feeder.
This depends on whether the consumer wishes to place moth larvae in their bakery products. Apart from that, no.
A mosquito larvae is a consumer, but only at the most basic level. With regards to its trophic level, it is a primary consumer. With regards to its feeding habits, it is a filter feeder.
Bye hoe 🖕🖕🖕🖕
A grub is a consumer. Grubs are immature insect larvae that primarily consume organic matter such as plant roots or decomposing plant material to obtain energy for growth and development.
Yes. A platypus is a secondary consumer. Secondary consumers are animals that eat primary consumers, and although platypuses do not eat fish, they do eat other primary consumers such as crustaceans, insect larvae and annelid worms.
Yes, a woodpecker is considered a consumer. As a bird that primarily feeds on insects, larvae, and sometimes tree sap, it relies on other organisms for its food. Therefore, it occupies a place in the food chain as a primary consumer, specifically a secondary consumer when it preys on insects that feed on plants.
A dragonfly is not a producer since it does not manufacture its food. A dragonfly is classified as a consumer as it eats other insects.
Yes it is. it eats wunzle larvae as well. but yes, it is a consumer. eating wunzle has nothing to do with it being a consumer because it is one. well not the wunzle lar vae but the snook fish. i just thought i would mention something it eats.
They are larvae
Dragonfly larvas eat other bugs wich make 'em carnivores
I'm not entirely sure, but I think that larvae are called 'larvae'.