A secondary consumer is a animal that eats a primary consumer. For example, a snake eating a mouse. The snake would be a secondary consumer because it eats a primary consumer, the mouse . The mouse is a primary consumer because it eats a producer which would be anything that makes its own food, mostly plants. I do not know of and producer that are in the Michigan wetlands, but some might be duckweed or even lily pads.
neither, the ecosystem 'wetlands' is not a producer or a consumer. but plants and animals inside the wetlands are consumers and producers. Keep this in mind, only plants are consumers. Also be specific which wetlands you are talking about in the world
There are many secondary consumers that can be found in Nebraska lakes. These organisms include plankivorous fish and predaceous invertebrates. These secondary consumers can be found living and growing in all areas of the lake zones. However, in lakes that have a lack of oxygen, there may be less of the consumers located in the bottom of the water and in sediment areas.
I suppose crocodiles and alligators are two examples.
leaches
bvch
arctic chickens
frogs, cranes etc
cow deer sheep and rabbit
Primary Producers are always plants, any type of plant. For wetlands some examples of producers could be cat tails, tall grass, weeds, water lily's, flowers or even the leaves off of trees, if its a plant and can be consumed, its a producer.
Primary Consumers are consumers that are one level up from producers in the food chain. They will always eat grasses and such, so they will be herbivores. Primary consumers found in a wetland could be deer, ducks or waterfowl (that is NOT a bird-of-prey) or minnow-like fish (only if they eat producers, not other fish).
Cattails, tall grass, and weeds wild flowers,and rear leaves
a food chain starting from the producers ;)