At the bottom would be the grass, and above it would be the rabbit. An arrow would point from the grass to the rabbit, showing that the rabbit eats the grass. Then the snake and leopard would be above the rabbit, and there would be two arrows pointing away from the rabbit (one toward the snake and one toward the leopard). This shows that the snake and the leopard eat the rabbit. There could also be an arrow pointing from the snake to the leopard (although it is rare for leopards to actually eat snakes, they do have a varied diet and would eat a snake).
Theanwer is hawk to snake to mouse to grass
Grass---> A Rabbit----> A Lion...
Yes, what is the eastern cottontail rabbit food chain
An animal can be a primary consumer in a food web (a rabbit eating grass).An animal can be a secondary consumer (a snake eating a rabbit).An animal can be a tertiary consumer (an owl eating a snake).An animal can be a quaternary consumer in a food web (a hawk eating an owl).There can be more levels, but the food web always ends with the top predator, the animal with no natural enemies.
An animal can be a primary consumer in a food web (a rabbit eating grass).An animal can be a secondary consumer (a snake eating a rabbit).An animal can be a tertiary consumer (an owl eating a snake).An animal can be a quaternary consumer in a food web (a hawk eating an owl).There can be more levels, but the food web always ends with the top predator, the animal with no natural enemies.
No a forest snake is not a rabbit, it a forest snake
Grass---> A Rabbit----> A Lion...
no, grass has little nutritional value. its better to feed them alfalfa or rabbit food.
There are multiple answers but heres one: Grass-> Grasshoppers-> Mice-> Snake
grass,shrubs --> warthog --> lion, cheetah, leopard.
it is the sun then grass then Markhor then a snow leopard then a person
You start it off with the sun then it goes to the grass then what eats grass and so on.