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name four secondary consumers in the salt marsh community
Producers, Primary Consumers Secondary Consumers Tertiary Consumers
The tropical rainforest food chain has four levels. The four levels are the primary producers, the primary consumers, secondary consumers and the tertiary consumers.
energy source(sun)>producer(grass)>primary consumer(mouse)>secondary consumer(snake)> tertiary(hawk)>decomposer(fungi) All organisms die and get broken down by decomposers
There are four trophic levels in an ecological pyramid. They are primary producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers.
In a food chain, there are four crucial members. There are the primary producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers and tertiary consumers. An example of a food chain can be found in a stream found in a forest. The primary producers would be plant like producers such as algae that produce food energy for the primary consumers which would be small microorganisms, or very small fish. The secondary consumers such as salmon will feed on these primary consumers for food. The tertiary consumers such as bears will feed on the secondary consumers for their food.
There are four trophic levels. They are plants, which produce food, herbivores, which are the animals that eat the plants, primary consumers, which eat the herbivores, and secondary consumers, which are those animals that eat primary consumers.
Yes, they are post secondary institutions as well as the four year colleges and universities.
producer s, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and Decomposers!
No. A example of a Secondary consumer would be a Lion eating its prey. Ticks don't eat you they feed off of you. They are considered more of a parasite. But to better explain the consumer part. There are four levels of consumers, the Primary, Secondary, Tertiary, and Quaternary. And it goes in that order.
1- Producers- make their own food (plants, photosynthetic bacteria, etc.) 2- Primary Consumers- eat the producers, small (rodents, bugs, etc.) 3- Secondary Consumers- eat the primary consumers (ex: snakes) 4- Tertiary Consumers- eat the secondary consumers, larger, (ex: owls, humans) There are not many trophic levels because only 10% of the energy available at one trophic level is passed on to the next level, and so the amount of energy available after many levels is not able to support many organisms.
yes