Secondary rebuilds.
Although its impossible , but if both primary and secondary consumers die your business will run out of customers.
the plant will die
u die.
herbivores will reign supreme as there are no secondary consumers to eat them. This means the plants will decrease in population however, herbivores can be eaten by tertiary consumers (humans for example). Hope this answers your question 007 SGS
If there were more secondary consumers than primary consumer, then the primary consumers may not be able to find food to survive and become extinct. With too many secondary consumers as a result of no predators of them, then all of the plants may become extinct as well, causing the whole food chain to die out.
you can die cause you cant breath
school (generic) -> die Schule school (in the sense of a primary or secondary school) -> die Schule school (in the sense of a postsecondary school, an American sense) -> die Hochschule, die Universitaet
you die not i wont give the end away but ill tell you this its realy cool
What would happen if grasses and shrubs were removed from an ecosystem? A.the primary consumers would increaseB.the primary consumers would become secondary consumersC.the primary consumers would die out or move elsewhereD.the primary consumers would stay unchanged
Yes and no, without them there would be no life because primary consumers would die without food, and then secondary consumers and so forth. However secondary consumers don't feed directly from the producers so they are not all the food in that sense.
Enzymes are considered primary metabolites because they are essential for the basic metabolic functions of an organism, such as digestion, respiration, and energy production. Secondary metabolites, on the other hand, are produced by some organisms for specific purposes like defense or signaling, but are not essential for basic metabolic processes.