The cells found in producers are capable of photosynthesis as in case of green plants. The consumer cells lack the capacity of photosynthesis as in case of animals and paracites.
Producers are plants, such as cacti. Consumers are those who depend on plants for energy, such as lizards or birds. Decomposers are those that feed on dead animals, such as maggots and fungi.
Producers somehow affect - whether directly or indirectly - every organism in their ecosystem. All producers make their own food - either through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, and the consumers of the ecosystem eat the producers, and other consumers eat those consumers, and eventually every organism in that ecosystem has consumed producers.
The name for organisms that eat producers is Consumers.Generically, 'producers' or 'autotrophs' make their own food from Water, Carbon dioxide and the energy in Sunlight and 'consumers' or 'heterotrophs' get their food/energy by eating producers.However, consumers can be subdivided into:-Herbivores (which only eat producers, primary consumers - e.g. Zebra, Rabbits)Carnivores (which predate and eat herbivores, secondary consumers - e.g. Tigers, Sharks)Omnivores (which can eat both herbivores and producers - e.g. Humans, Pigs)There are also those organisms which break down and decompose producers and consumers when they die.
A producer produces its own food, like how a plant produces its food from the Sun (photosynthesis). Producers are at the bottom of the food chain, they provide food for consumers. Without producers, an ecosystem could not sustain itself.Producers are plants that give us oxygen, and vegetables and fruits. Producers don't eat other producers and organisms, they only get eaten.
Those cells are metabolically very active. So a lot is found
As far as ecosystems go. only plants, trees, grasses are producers. Those that eat them are called consumers. Humans are those.
Producers are plants, such as cacti. Consumers are those who depend on plants for energy, such as lizards or birds. Decomposers are those that feed on dead animals, such as maggots and fungi.
Producers somehow affect - whether directly or indirectly - every organism in their ecosystem. All producers make their own food - either through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis, and the consumers of the ecosystem eat the producers, and other consumers eat those consumers, and eventually every organism in that ecosystem has consumed producers.
The name for organisms that eat producers is Consumers.Generically, 'producers' or 'autotrophs' make their own food from Water, Carbon dioxide and the energy in Sunlight and 'consumers' or 'heterotrophs' get their food/energy by eating producers.However, consumers can be subdivided into:-Herbivores (which only eat producers, primary consumers - e.g. Zebra, Rabbits)Carnivores (which predate and eat herbivores, secondary consumers - e.g. Tigers, Sharks)Omnivores (which can eat both herbivores and producers - e.g. Humans, Pigs)There are also those organisms which break down and decompose producers and consumers when they die.
No, elephants are animals. Animals are consumers, that is they get their energy from outside, form their food. Producers are those organisms which can generate their own food, and are nearly always green plants.
Because they are the base of our food chain, primary consumers such as herbivores (plant eaters) eat producers when secondary consumers (omnivores) eat those and finally tertiary consumers eat those.tertiary consumers consist of people,bears,etc.
No, they are not. Producers are plants and those maggots are not plants. That makes them consumers. In this case, they fit under the category of decomposers.
Producers are those organisms capable of making their own food by trapping the energy from the Sun (ie plants). ALL other life on earth get their energy by eating plants (or eating things that eat plants) these organisms are therefore Consumers.
There are basically three levels of consumers: primary, secondary and top level consumer. Primary consumers include organisms which feed on the producers, that is to say, green plants. Herbivores are included under this category. Secondary consumers include those organisms which feed on primary consumers. They indirectly derive nutrition from the producers. Top level consumers are those which feed on either primary or secondary consumers or both. consider a food chain like this: plant -> rat -> snake -> predatory bird in this food chain, the first level consumer is rat(herbivore) while snake is second level(carnivore) and finally a predatory bird which feeds on both rat and snake, which makes it a top level consumer.
A secondary consumer is one that eats a primary consumer, and is therefore either carnivorous or omnivorous. These trophic levels are not innate to the organism, and it can change its behavior and therefore its place in the food chain. Producers cannot become consumers, and consumers cannot become producers, but secondary consumers can become primary consumers, or tertiary consumers, etc. Two examples of secondary consumers in the ocean would be the orca (a carnivorous mammal), and the whale shark (an omnivorous fish). Secondary consumers are not necessarily apex predators, although those two are. Squids are also typically secondary consumers, and are not apex predators.
eventually all of the consumers that eats those plants (producers) would die off or move to a different habitat. But this will most likely not happen because it would be very hard to permanently destroy all of the producers in that biome.
i thing a dragonfly is a consumer and adecomposer