Jackals primarily feed on smaller animals, but they are opportunistic feeders and will prey on larger animals when necessary. They may target young or weakened individuals of larger species, such as antelope, deer, and even livestock. In addition to hunting, jackals also scavenge from larger predators, taking advantage of carcasses to supplement their diet. Their adaptability allows them to thrive in diverse environments.
Both. They eat insects so they are predators, but they are also prey to larger animals.
both, they eat creatures smaller than themself, and larger animals prey on them.
Snakes eat prey animals that are relative to their own size. The larger the snake - the larger meal it needs for it to survive.
No. A mother viper will abandon her young after giving birth. Snakes can eat prey larger than their heads, but not larger than themselves.
jackal can run very fast and they have sharp teeth to ripe their pray to eat jackal is a carnivore
It is both predator and prey. Dragonflies eat other flying insects bu can fall prey to larger animals such as birds.
"The woman he's yelling at laughs like a cartoon jackal." - 119 Anderson
Larger predators such as lions, hyenas, and crocodiles may prey on felines in the wild. Additionally, birds of prey like eagles and owls have been known to prey on smaller felines.
They eat mice which they can swallow whole whereas larger prey must be shredded by their beak in order to be swallowed/consumed .
They maily prey on rodents such as the big headed mole rat, but rarely they prey on the young of larger animals such as mountain nyalas.
It actually depends on what kind of jackal it is. The Golden Jackal eats pears as a fruit. The vegetation that they eat can be dogwood and hawthorn.
Answer: As larger kangaroos are herbivores they don't hunt, therefore have no prey. Smaller species of kangaroos such as musky rat-kangaroos prey on small invertebrates such as earthworms and grasshoppers.