Producers: Grasses and Caribou Mosses
Carnivores: Polar Bears and Arctic Wolves
Herbivores: Caribou and Lemmings
Omnivores: Arctic fox and Brown Bears
Decomposer: Bacteria and Fungi
Yes, lichens in the arctic tundra food chain are considered primary producers rather than consumers, as they make their own food through photosynthesis using sunlight, water, and nutrients from the soil. They are an important food source for herbivores like caribou and musk oxen in the arctic tundra ecosystem.
Polar Bears Arctic Fox's Coyotes Grizzly bears Killer Whales
They try to eat very warm food, they also hunt for fish and animals in the Arctic tundra.
Yes, polar bears are on the top of the Arctic food chain. Then the seals.
Tundra. The arctic tundra in the summer and then they migrate to the Boreal Forest in the winter.
Arctic Foxes and scavenger birds
If you mean Arctic tundra then yes.
Yes.
there are no decomposers in a tundra
Simplistically, from their food. However, the base of the food chains, the producers of the tundra, are the plants such as arctic mosses, which photosynthesise like plants everywhere.
north siberian plain
It means that only the strongest organisms in the tundra can survive, like the polar bears who are on top of the food chain in the arctic. Also there is low number of different organisms there.