No, the animal the scavenger is eating is.
NO. Cows are herbivores, not carnivores, which mean they don't scavenge for food the same way foxes and coyotes scavenge for food. Scavenging never refers to herbivores or any grazing animal.
Yes. They can not make their own food like plants so they are cosumers.
Arctic Foxes and scavenger birds
scavenger
No. Producers are at the bottom of the food chain.
The bottom of the food chain is the plant or the producer.
The consumer is always at the top, or end of the food chain. Producers are at the bottom, or beginning of the food chain.
a scavenger is is the 2nd consumer in the food chain. It eats dead animals. Some examples of scavengers are vultures.A scavenger is a crow or a vulture.a lion
a hyena
they are mostly scavenger. they also hunt zebra, impalas and occasionally wilder-beast!
the organisms in the bottom of the food chain are usually producers.
2nd degree consumer, because of it being a scavenger.
bottom
Plants are usually at the bottom of the food chain. The thing at the bottom of the food chain has to be able to make its own food, if it ate anything it would no longer be at the bottom of the food chain. Plants make their own food from carbon dioxide, water and sunlight in a process called photosynthesis. i agree and would just like to add the sun isn't the bottem of the food chain