No, but your but is
Phytoplankton is not a decomposer it's a producer.
No they are not decomposers.They are primary producers
yes
yes
noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
zooplankton are not scavengers because being a scavenger means that you eat dead animals.
Zooplankton
By eating phytoplankton.
zooplankton
No, dogs are not decomposers. Dogs are consumers. Decomposers are organisms, such as bacteria and fungi that live in the forest.
No.
Many insects are decomposers as they consume dead materials, but not all insects are decomposers. Honey bees would not be considered decomposers. Termites would be considered decomposers.
Many insects are decomposers as they consume dead materials, but not all insects are decomposers. Honey bees would not be considered decomposers. Termites would be considered decomposers.
Yes it is
zooplanton eat phytoplankton so they are considered herbivores
Humans are not considered decomposers; humans are considered consumers, as we kill and consume other organisms for nourishment. Contrarily, decomposers are organisms (such as mushrooms) that break down other organisms that have already deceased.
There are Many ecosystems but there is one main one it goes like this - microrganisms---->zooplankton---> Whale------>Shark-----> Decomposers
noooo
Vorticella attach themselves to a substrate with their stalk. They can, however, detach themselves and swim to a different location. They are heterotrophs, so if they are considered plankton, then they are zooplankton.
Primary producers-plankton. Photosynthetic algae, decomposers, cyanobacteris, zooplankton(most of these are planktivores ie. Daphnia, copepods, small crustaceans
Yes but they can also be considered decomposers.
Yes but they can also be considered decomposers.