Carnivores eat producers and consumers. Bacteria and fungi may be parasitic or detrivores.
Consumers are typically eaten by carnivores in a food chain. Carnivores feed on other animals, while herbivores eat plant materials. Bacteria and fungi play a role in decomposing organic matter after consumers have died.
Herbivores
All animals are consumers. Only plants can be producers. Only fungi and bacteria can be true decomposes. A shrew is an animal.
Fungi and bacteria would eat a dead fox or any other animal that is deceased.
The aye-aye primarily eats seeds, nuts, fungi and grubs.. Therefore it is an omnivore.
A fungi is not an animal, so none of those. Mushrooms and mold are fungi. Most fungi obtains food by absorbing nutrients from where it is growing, like on decomposing organic matter.
decomposers
Carnivore, Herbivore, Parasite, Detrivore, Decomposer, Scavenger
The Hadrosaurids were herbivores, although they may have occasionally eaten decomposing wood, and the insects and fungi within it.
Dead algae is not classified as an omnivore, carnivore, or herbivore since it is not alive and therefore cannot consume or digest food. Algae, when dead, serves as organic matter that can be broken down by decomposers like bacteria and fungi.
ONLY plants can be producers. ONLY bacteria and fungi can be decomposers ALL the rest are consumers.
fungi or mushrooms in the trees, bacteria in the trash