It is a third level consumer because bears are considered omnivores
I could probably say no because these are animals that eat meat and leaves but probably it could be a secondary consumer if it will it a deer in a food chain
yes .!
Yes.
yes it is
is a black caiman a second or a tertiary consumer
yes
All these sectors (industrial, agricultural, and other trades) contribute to the economy of Nigeria, but industry is currently the largest contributor.
Orange, purple and green are the secondary colors that can be made out of primary colors. You cannot make black out of primary colors.
Herbivore
Neither, white and black are not considered colors.White (and gray) is what you get from mixing equal amounts of the three primary colors, the difference between white and gray is just brightness.Black is not a color either, but rather the absence of color and brightness.
Colors resulting from the equal mixture of a primary color with either of the secondary colors adjacent to it on a color wheel.The tertiary colors are: yellow-orange, red-orange, red-violet, blue violet, blue-green, and yellow-green.hope this helps!source; http://www.artsparx.com/colorwheel.asp
Yes, as is every member of a food chain. The top member of a food chain becomes prey to another food chain and its consumer(s).
tertiary color (mixture of primary colors-red, yellow, blue, and secondary colors-orange,purple(violet), and green.) the tertiary colors are: red orange, yellow orange, yellow green, blue green, and blue purple(violet) The above implies the primaries are red, yellow blue. They are not. Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. Televison: red, green, blue.
There are three primary colors in the color spectrum. Red, Yellow, and Blue. These are Primary because no other color combinations can make them. Secondary colors are- orange, green, purple. After that there are also tertiary colors which are variations of secondary colors. The color white is the absence of color and black is the combination of all colors. Definition of a primary? Pass. List of primaries? Fail Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. Televison: red, green blue.
brown and purple As there is a fundamental error in your question, let me start by explaining that although red and blue are primary colours green is not. Yellow is the third primary colour of a standard colour pallet. Green is a secondary colour achieved by mixing yellow and blue. The primary, secondary and tertiary colours as found on a standard colour wheel are as follows: Yellow - primary 1 part red + 3 parts yellow = yellow-orange (tertiary) 2 parts red + 2 parts yellow = orange (secondary) 3 parts red + 1 part yellow = red-orange (tertiary) Red - Primary 3 parts red + 1 part blue = red-purple (tertiary) 2 parts red + 2 parts blue = purple (secondary) 1 part red + 3 parts blue = blue-purple (tertiary) Blue - primary 3 parts blue + 1 part yellow = blue-green (tertiary) 2 parts blue+ 2 parts yellow = green (secondary) 1 parts blue + 3 parts yellow = yellow-green (tertiary) The mixture of all three primary colours (or a primary and its complimentary secondary colour) usually result in some form of brown. However, when artists are mixing colour for shaded areas of a painting it is common for them to mix the opposite colour into the shaded area to get dark grey or blackish colour that gives the painting more "life" than the use of true black. An example of this is when adding deep shade to the leaves of a tree, a very dark shade of the leaf colour is mixed with a small amount of very dark red, to get an almost black shadow.
a black bear