Secondary consumers has the largest population because certain products have to go through various chains for them to reach certain people.
Without workers the producers wouldn't have anything to provide for the consumers to consume
Consumers are the Creatures that use up products.
primary, secondary and tertiary
goods is the thing that are go no be sold. services is the treatment or providing things to sale
In a market economy, the price mechanism signals to producers what goods and services are in demand by reflecting consumers' willingness to pay. When demand for a product increases, prices rise, incentivizing producers to allocate more resources to its production. Conversely, if demand decreases, prices fall, prompting producers to reduce output or shift to more profitable alternatives. This dynamic helps ensure that resources are directed toward the production of goods and services that meet consumer needs and preferences.
Explain how producers consumers and decomposers all have an ecosystem support the population within it
Producers need to know what consumers want so they can sell more and make more profit.
producers need to know that consumers want so they can sell more and make more profit
Without workers the producers wouldn't have anything to provide for the consumers to consume
Carbon is cycled from the atmosphere to producers (plants) through photosynthesis, where they take in carbon dioxide to produce glucose. Consumers then consume these plants, obtaining carbon by eating them. When consumers respire or decompose, carbon is released back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.
Producers are eaten (consumed) by consumers, when either of them die , they are consumed by decomposers.
No. A example of a Secondary consumer would be a Lion eating its prey. Ticks don't eat you they feed off of you. They are considered more of a parasite. But to better explain the consumer part. There are four levels of consumers, the Primary, Secondary, Tertiary, and Quaternary. And it goes in that order.
The free choices made by consumers and producers influence each other. ~Apex
Consumers are the Creatures that use up products.
True. Any animal that eats a herbivore can be called a secondary consumer. The reason for this is because a herbivore consumes plants (producers), so the herbivore is known as a primary consumer. The secondary consumer would feed on the primary consumer, which is why it's called a secondary consumer, and the herbivore is called a primary consumer. So the order is - The plant is the producer, the herbivore (which eats plants) is the primary consumer, the animal that eats the herbivore (the primary consumer) is the secondary consumer, and the animal that eats the secondary consumer (the animal that eats the herbivore) is known as the tertiary consumer. If you want to go even farther, the animal that eats the tertiary consumer is known as the Quaternary consumer. An example would be a flower (the producer) that is fed upon by a grasshopper (the primary consumer). A rat or mouse (the secondary consumer) feeds on the grasshopper, and a snake (the tertiary consumer) feeds on the mouse/rat. Finally, a hawk (the quaternary consumer) feeds upon the snake. Thus completing the cycle. A secondary consumer can also be a primary consumer too (a herbivore), if it's able to feed on a herbivore as well as plants. Laura~ This is absoulotley true. I was asking this question too, thanks again.
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A reduction in sunlight can lead to decreased primary productivity, limiting the availability of food sources for consumers in the ocean ecosystem. This scarcity of resources can cause increased competition among consumers as they vie for the limited food supply. This heightened competition may result in some species outcompeting others, leading to shifts in the ecosystem's structure and dynamics.