scavenger
Fungus has the role of decomposer in a food chain it decomposes the dead organic material and feeds on it.
Algae are microscopic organisms that grows in the water. Algae is eaten by fish or krill and other tiny creatures. In a food chain it would be considered a producer because it harnesses the sun's energy to create food that is consumed by other organisms.
A Komodo dragon is a predator at the top of its food chain, so it is not considered a food chain in itself. A food chain is a linear flow of energy from one organism to another, showing the transfer of nutrients through various levels of a community. The Komodo dragon would be a part of a food chain as a predator preying on various lower-level organisms for its food.
An anteater would be considered a 2nd order heterotroph in most cases. An anteater would be considered a 2nd order heterotroph in most cases.
Producers
Herbivores are at the second level of the food chain. Rhinos are herbivores and are considered primary consumers which means they're first consumers in the food chain.
I only know that a fox eats a crow a fox is a omnivore so if you are making a food chain it would be best to get a carnivore Any carnivore will eat a crow, so that would be any sort of dog, not just foxes; any sort of cat; and any of the predatory birds such as eagles and hawks.
Yes, as a human, you would typically be considered a tertiary consumer in the food chain. This means that you consume organisms at the secondary consumer level, which in turn consume organisms at the primary consumer level.
The rest of the food chain would collapse and there would be lots of deaths from starvation.
The Peregrine Falcon is a carnivore - and thus, should exist in either level three or, very rarely, level four of any food chain.
If all the consumers in a food chain died, only the lowest rung of a food chain (the autonomic non-consumer) would survive.
they are mostly scavenger. they also hunt zebra, impalas and occasionally wilder-beast!