Chickens aren't plants or autotrophs, so they can't be producers. They don't break down organic material in the soil like fungi and bacteria, so they aren't decomposers. That leaves you with consumers.
Producer could be omitted, as decomposers and consumers can still function in the ecosystem without producers. Decomposers break down organic matter, while consumers feed on producers or other consumers.
The three energy roles in an ecosystem are producers, consumers, and decomposers. ;)
A producer is always at the beginning of a food chain. A producer will always be a plant. A primary consumer eats the producer. The secondary consumer eats the primary consumer. The scavenger comes next (if it gets there before the decomposer.) The decomposer will always be last. Example: (where there is a scavenger) grass --> rabbit --> fox --> vulture --> mushroom producer, primary consumer, secondary consumer, scavenger, decomposer
producers like trees, plants e.t.c., produces food material to consumers(goats, buffalo's), decomposers decomposes the consumers,producers and waste materials to products that are again useful for producers. thus they can interact withe each other.
consumer
decomposer
chickens are consumers plants are producers trust me this is true ( animals and humans are all consumers)
A polar bear is a consumer.
no it is not it is a producer
the anwer is tadpole algae are producers heron are consumers
Decomposer. i acnt remember why but my scince teacher said that.
consumers , and decomposers are related by a decomposer eating a dead organism that has died recently and that consumer ate a producer to pass on the energy needed to an organism....
producer
1. Producers 2. Consumers 3. Decomposer
They can easily survive without any other organisms. So, as a group, they are producers, consumers and decomposers.
Cougars are consumers. Only plants are producers and only bacteria and fungi are decomposers.
All birds are consumers - only plants and some protists are producers.