producer
yes, they are a consumer because they eat small crickets.
A blue jay exists mainly as a primary consumer, though it rarely eats eggs, potentially classifying it as a secondary consumer.
Yes i think it is... yeah im sure it is!
Only plants are producers. Animals eat plants or other animals- they consume them.
The stellar jay is primarily a secondary consumer. It feeds on insects, small animals, and fruit, placing it higher in the food chain as it consumes primary consumers like insects. However, it can also be considered an omnivore since it eats plant material, but its role as a consumer is mainly secondary due to its predation on other animals.
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Yes, of course; all living things are consumers, and if the grey shark did not consume, it would die.
Is there a bird starting with J? Junco. Slate-colored Junco, for example. A small perching bird common in the southern U.S. Appalachian Mtns. region. Also, Jay, i.e. Blue Jay, Stellar's Jay, Grey or Canada Jay Just thought of, Scrub Jay, a bird found near me in SW Florida, U.S.
well if its a fish, only plants can be producers so. a producer is something that produces its own food. a consumer eats something that is a producer that is called a food chain when you figure out what eats what
well if its a fish, only plants can be producers so. a producer is something that produces its own food. a consumer eats something that is a producer that is called a food chain when you figure out what eats what
A scrub jay is a consumer because it gets its energy by eating other organisms, such as insects, seeds, and small fruits. It is not a decomposer (which breaks down dead organic matter) or a producer (which makes its own food through photosynthesis).