nothing dodo
alfalfa is a plant that cannot be a seconed leval consumer
Anything that consumes plant life.
A coyote can be classified as both a first-level and a second-level consumer depending on its diet. As a first-level consumer, it may eat fruits, seeds, and other plant materials, while as a second-level consumer, it preys on smaller animals like rodents or rabbits. This dietary flexibility allows coyotes to adapt to varying food availability in their environment, making them versatile omnivores in the food pyramid.
It produces food so first level consumer can eat and so on
The third level of consumer is called the tertiary consumer.
It is a third level consumer.
If you are talking about food webs, then the first consumer is an herbivore or plant eater.
Producers are plants, and are found on the first trophic level. Consumers are normally animals, and they comsume the plants or other animals that have eaten the plant before them. These consumers are found on the second trophic level and upwards, depending on how the consume the energy that originated from the plant.
The group of organisms that occupy the second trophic level of an ecosystem is the herbivores. The herbivores eat the plants in the first trophic level and are then called primary consumers. -Gallo :)
The short answer is, "NO". they are considered 2nd level consumers. First level consumers are animals such as Mice, who feed on plants, plant-based, etc.. Since a Rattlesnake would eat a mouse, it would be considered 2nd level. An example of a 3rd level consumer would be a hawk, or some other bird of prey, eating the snake.
Primary consumer. Because in a food chain it is the first thing to eat (consume) something else. Producer (plant)->Primary consumer (plant eater)->secondary consumer (eater of plant eaters)(and so on...)
Snakes are one example. The producer for that specific example could be shrubs and grasses, the primary consumer could be grasshoppers, the secondary consumer could be mice, and the third level consumer could be snakes.