The various trophic levels will regulate a population when organisms feed on other organisms. The different levels are producers, consumers and decomposers which help in maintaining the nutrient cycle.
Animals are a major group of multicellular organisms that are capable of locomotion, respond to their environment, and feed by consuming other organisms. They encompass a diverse range of species found across a variety of habitats.
Anything that's not a producer or autotroph, which means it makes its own food. An organism that feeds on other organisms is a heterotroph, which could be a parasite, which feeds on dead organisms; a carnivore, which is a meat eater; or an herbivore, which feeds on plants.
No, whales do not typically eat other whales. They primarily feed on small fish, krill, and other marine organisms.
Killer Whales feed on dolphins. Both are multicellular organisms. i think he means a more general description such as: carnivore, herbivore, consumer A parasite.
No, whales do not typically eat other whales in the wild. They primarily feed on small fish, krill, and other marine organisms.
A Predator
Consumers ^_^
Herbivores eat plants only
Omnivores
Parasite.
dolphins, other sharks and,YOU!
it is some kind of organism that eats roadkill scavenger?
They feed on mollusks, worms and other benthic organisms.
Food Chain.
Most are heterotrophs. They feed on other animals to obtain the nutrients they need to live.
scavengers, saprophage, saprophyte
No, not all microorganisms feed on dead organisms. Microorganisms are classified as either decomposers, which feed on dead organisms, or as parasites, which feed on living organisms. Some microorganisms also obtain their nutrients from non-living sources such as minerals or sunlight.