They eat all dead and/or decomposing animals, they're also called carrion.
That would be a scavenger. Examples: foxes, most vultures
Scavengers.they are usually flying birds like vultures or crows
Decomposers.The above answer is incorrect. Decomposers are primarily fungi. Scavengers is the correct answer.well i think that it is the spotted hyena that eats dead animals because they most likely don't hunt for food
Vultures eat the same thing in the desert that they eat everywhere else in the world. They are scavengers. They eat other animals that have died. Vultures soar around until they see a dead animal, then they swoop down and eat it.
Scavenger is the scientific name of animals that feed on dead animals and plants. There is a huge number of scavengers like vultures, beetles, and raccoons.
scavenging is an example of an eater-eaten relationship because animals who feed on the dead animals may be eaten by other live animals when they are dead....For Example; Vultures feed on dead animals but when the vulture is dead another live animal will feed on it and when that live animal becomes dead another animal will feed on its dead body and so on...
Vultures eat (previously killed) large mammals such as deer, goats, sheep, donkeys, horses, pigs, cougars, bears, and cattle. They will also eat (perviously killed) small animals like rabbits and coyote. They rarely eat reptiles and other birds. The already dead animals are known generally as 'carrion'.Vultures eat carrion and are scavengers (the bodies of dead and rotting animals) - they do not kill these animals themselves - so they are not predators.-they also eat the bones of the animals because their digestive system can disolve the bones fast.
A vulture is a scavenger. A scavenger is a carnivore that does not kill its own food but eats carrion, the dead bodies of animals; either prey killed by other hunters or animals that have died of other causes.
are animals born knowing something already?
Angel Gendriz is a scavenger in the swamp.
vultures they eat any thing dead
Since tigers have no natural predator, the only scenario in which it is eaten is either one in which it has died of natural causes and scavengers like vultures or wild boars eat its carcass, or one in which survival is thoroughly threatened, and the tiger is extremely weak, and a rival predator of near equal power kills it to survive. The second case very seldom occurs.