No, they're consumers because they eat other animals.
fox hawk rabbit frog snake
Plant. Plants are always the producers
All animals are consumers. Only plants can be producers. Only fungi and bacteria can be true decomposes. A snake is an animal.
No, producers are plants. Garter snakes would probably be secondary consumers.
Only plants are producers Only bacteria and fungi are decomposers. Ask yoursef, is a snake a bactera, fungi or plant - the answer you come up with will (with the information provided above) answer your question.
Only plants are producers Only bacteria and fungi are decomposers. Ask yoursef, is a snake a bactera, fungi or plant - the answer you come up with will (with the information provided above) answer your question.
Grass - grasshopper eats grass - frog eats grasshopper - snake eats frog - secretary bird eats snake - Secretary bird dies and its carcass is rotted by decomposers (bacteria).
They are consumers because they do not make there own
The banded coral sea snake is a consumer. It primarily feeds on fish and other marine organisms, making it a predator in its ecosystem. Unlike producers, which create energy through photosynthesis, or decomposers, which break down dead organic matter, the banded coral sea snake relies on consuming other living organisms for its energy.
Snakes are neither green like plants which are producers, nor are they microscopic like bacteria nor tiny like maggots so they are not decomposers. That leaves consumers.
Producers
In the food chain you provided, the producer is the flower. Producers are organisms that can create their own food through photosynthesis, and flowers, as part of plants, fall into this category. The mouse, snake, and hawk are all consumers, with each representing different levels in the food chain.