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.
Primary producers (plants), primary consumers (herbivores), secondary consumers (carnivores and omnivores), decomposers (detritivores).
The first one is herbivores (c1). The second is primary carnivores (c2) . The third is secondary carnivores (c3) . And the last one is top carnivores (c4).
There are four trophic levels in an ecological pyramid. They are primary producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers.
Mosquitos can be of many different trophic levels, as they consume the blood of animals from multiple trophic levels.
Due to poor trophic transfer efficiency, most energy is lost at higher trophic levels.
5
A rain forest ecosystem can support 3-4 trophic levels.
There are four trophic levels in an ecological pyramid. They are primary producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers.
Mosquitos can be of many different trophic levels, as they consume the blood of animals from multiple trophic levels.
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.
Due to poor trophic transfer efficiency, most energy is lost at higher trophic levels.
Five
The food web is made up of different levels labeled as trophic levels. Chimpanzee's belong on the 3rd trophic level.
there can be any number of trophic levels, but usually 4-5
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The trophic level is the level in the food chain that an animal occupies. The armadillo belongs to both the second and third trophic levels.
The armadillo eats insects, grubs, particularly ants and termites. It eats a similar diet to birds. They consume level three and four consumers. They occupy both of these trophic levels.
5