Humans. in some countries snake is a delicacy
A food chain is one animal right after each other (ex. hawk> snake> mouse> grass) and on a food chain things branch off. (ex. hawk and eagle> snake and cat> mouse and cow> grass). All of this would be in diagram form. Look up pictures of food chain and food web on the internet.
Carnivores in the food chain would eat cows. This is because carnivores eat meat and cows have meat in them.
Cows are at the bottom of the food-chain, since they are herbivores, not carnivores. In contrast, humans would be at the top.
it is in the middle it eates the cow
what about 'mad cow disease ? This can be passed to man from the food chain..
Grass goes to a Cow. The cow is killed and cooked into a hamburger which, in turn gets consumed by humans.
Because in the food chain, autotrophs obtain the most amout of energy because they get it directly from the sun. As the food chain decreses, the energy lesses.
Humans, and any other carnivore (or omnivore) that is higher up on the food chain than a cow is will eat a cow, either by killing and eating it, or scavenging a cow's carcass.
A consumer is an organism in a food chain than obtains energy(chemical energy) from food such as another organism e.g a cow eats the grass. The cow is a primary consumer; a tiger eats the cow; the tiger is a secondary consumer So Anything in the food chain/web after the producer (plant) is a consumer
Near the middle, since a cow is a herbivore and a prey animal, which means it eats plants and is commonly preyed on by higher-order predators like humans, wolves, lions, etc.
From a previous answer...It's entirely possible, yes. A young, immature snake is much more able to kill a cow (or a young calf) than a fully grown adult, simply because the young snake tends to inject all its venom at one time into the animal. An adult snake only injects just a little, which will make the area where the snake bit the cow a bit swollen and sore for a while, but won't kill the cow.
no