Scavengers are important because they eat the corpses of dead animals that aren't otherwise needed, thus beginning/speeding up the process of decomposition and eliminating the dangers of disease presented by untouched carcasses. They also lower the populations of unwanted vagrant carnivores that sometimes scavenge around livestock farms.
When the producer or consumer or in fact anything in it dies out or is removed then the food chain is destroyed.
I am looking for that too.
They provide a habitat for many wetland animals as well as food and water for species that pass through. Marine wetlands provide organisms important to the food chain of the sea. They also benefit human populations because they slow erosion, help recharge groundwater, and help prevent flooding.
Wheat - Aphids - Ladybirds - Spider
a senator
the predator
Dingoes are at the top of the food chain. They are predators, and scavengers, and will prey on smaller or injured marsupials and other mammals.
Hyenas are scavengers.
bacteria is one Vultures, beetles, flies, crabs
at the end because humans have hardly any predators
Teritary consumers are the top predators of a food web or food chain; they're like scavengers.
Scavengers are animals that eat "left overs". They scavenge off of roadkill, carcasses, etc.
Yes scavengers and decomposers play important roles in a park ecosystem. Scavengers are animals that feed on the remains of other organisms, and decomposers are organisms that break down dead plant and animal matter and convert it into simpler substances that can be recycled back into the ecosystem. Both scavengers and decomposers help to recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem, and they are an important part of the food chain. In a park ecosystem, you might find scavengers such as vultures, crows, and beetles, and decomposers such as bacteria, fungi, and worms.omposers play important roles in a park ecosystem. Scavengers are animals that feed on the remains of other organisms, and decomposers are organisms that break down dead plant and animal matter and convert it into simpler substances that can be recycled back into the ecosystem. Both scavengers and decomposers help to recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem, and they are an important part of the food chain. In a park ecosystem, you might find scavengers such as vultures, crows, and beetles, and decomposers such as bacteria, fungi, and worms. Would you expect to find scavengers and decomposers in a park ecostytem?Yes scavengers and decomposers play important roles in a park ecosystem. Scavengers are animals that feed on the remains of other organisms, and decomposers are organisms that break down dead plant and animal matter and convert it into simpler substances that can be recycled back into the ecosystem. Both scavengers and decomposers help to recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem, and they are an important part of the food chain. In a park ecosystem, you might find scavengers such as vultures, crows, and beetles, and decomposers such as bacteria, fungi, and worms. Yes scavengers and decomposers play important roles in a park ecosystem. Scavengers are animals that feed on the remains of other organisms, and decomposers are organisms that break down dead plant and animal matter and convert it into simpler substances that can be recycled back into the ecosystem. Both scavengers and decomposers help to recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem, and they are an important part of the food chain. In a park ecosystem, you might find scavengers such as vultures, crows, and beetles, and decomposers such as bacteria, fungi, and worms.Yes scavengers and decomposers play important roles in a park ecosystem. Scavengers are animals that feed on the remains of other organisms, and decomposers are organisms that break down dead plant and animal matter and convert it into simpler substances that can be recycled back into the ecosystem. Both scavengers and decomposers help to recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem, and they are an important part of the food chain. In a park ecosystem, you might find scavengers such as vultures, crows, and beetles, and decomposers such as bacteria, fungi, and worms.
carnivore / Scavengers
they each use plants for energy or use it to gain food or make food
Producers are like plants etc. They are at the bottom of a food web or a food chain. Consumers are organisms that eat the producers so without the producer, they cannot live. Same applies for scavengers.
Mammals are a very broad group. Different mammals occupy different levels in the food chain including primary, secondary, and tertiary consumers as well as scavengers.