Polar bears are carnivorous, hence, they eat things that eat other things. Primary consumers are organisms that feed off of the nutrients supplied, i.e. plants, algae, etc. One creature eats a primary consumer, becomes a secondary consumer, and is eaten by polar bears, making them tertiary consumers.
yes, polar bears are a tertiary consumer.
Large carnivores, yes they are
only when its hot in winter and in the south of the north
Yes they are secondary consumers
Yes, bears are tertiary consumers because they are at the top of the food web and nothing else consumes them (except decomposers after the dead body decays)
Yes it is. A polar bear isn`t a plant, so it can`t make its food. It must "consume" food form a nother living source. Usally seals, or penquins meat this consumer.
~Amythefairy
Polar bears are top of the food chain in the Arctic regions. Their only enemy is man, though Polar Bears are now a protected species.
No, the polar bear is a tertiary consumer.
yes it is a tertiary consumer
No. Polar bears are tertiary consumers.
The polar bear is a tertiary consumer.
The polar bear is a tertiary consumer - third lever.
the polar bear is the world largest predator found on land.
Polar bears are tertiary (3rd level) consumers.
A polar is a fourth-level or tertiary consumer. This means that it is at the top of the food chain. Primary consumer in a polar bear's habitat are things like zooplankton. Secondary consumers are the fish that eat the plankton and third or tertiary consumers are the seals that eat the fish.
No. Polar bears are tertiary--some may even consider them to be quaternary--consumers.
Actually, the polar bear is a tertiary consumer.
Polar bears are tertiary consumers.
Arctic foxes do not prey on polar bears and are rarely eaten by polar bears.
It is a primary consumer.
A polar bear is a consumer.
the polar bear