Yes, most scavengers are omnivores, meaning they eat both plant and animal matter. They feed on a variety of food sources depending on what is available in their environment. Examples of scavengers include vultures, raccoons, and some species of insects.
No. Scavengers eat the bodies of dead animals, making it less likely that they will be fossilized.
Angel Gendriz is a scavenger in the swamp.
no they are decomposers
Actually, decomposers and scavengers aren't the same. Decomposers are living things that decompose animals. Scavengers are living things that eat parts of dead organism.-Hope this helps!
owls
Scavengers, or parasites. Scavengers wait for prey to be killed by something else, or to die by natural causes, and then eat them. Parasites eat other animals while they are still alive and cannot survive without the host animal.
Probably because of the number of natural scavengers. Almost as soon as an animal dies in the wild, scavengers will feast on the carcass.
Zebras are herbivores, primarily grazing on grasses, leaves, and shrubs. They do not eat meat, which means they are neither omnivores nor scavengers. Their diet is specifically adapted to their natural habitats in the savannas and grasslands of Africa.
Humans are considered to be both predators and scavengers. As predators, humans actively hunt and consume other animals for food. As scavengers, humans also opportunistically feed on the remains of animals killed by other predators or from natural causes. This versatility in diet has contributed to human evolutionary success.
Scavengers.
No, herring are not scavengers.
Yes, there are scavengers in the savannah.
functions of scavengers?
peregrine falcons have no natural predaters,but some scavengers eat the dead birds
Vultures and Lions are both scavengers.
In the savanna, scavengers are hawks and vultures.