Yes, lemmings are considered primary consumers. They primarily feed on a herbivorous diet, eating grasses, mosses, and other plant materials. As primary consumers, they play a crucial role in the food web by converting plant energy into a form that can be consumed by higher trophic levels, such as predators.
Lemmings are not decomposers. They are consumers.
Well, honey, in the Arctic, you've got your primary consumers chowing down on plants and algae like there's no tomorrow. We're talking about cute little critters like lemmings, voles, and Arctic hares, just living their best lives munching on vegetation. They're the bottom of the food chain, keeping things in check for the bigger predators to come in and snatch them up for a snack.
caterpillar, worm, plankton, rabbit ,and humans are consumers
No! Carnivores are secondary consumers. Herbivores are primary consumers.
no
Arctic foxes are omnivores. The arctic fox will generally eat any meat it can find, including lemmings and Arctic Hares
Primary consumers eat primary producers(plant-eaters). Secondary consumers eat primary consumers (meat-eaters) Tertiary consumers eat secondary consumers. Quaternary consumers eat tertiary consumers.
Rats are primary consumers. This means they will eat almost everything. In the wild, primary consumers provide nutrition for secondary consumers.
Primary consumers are herbivores that eat plants directly. Secondary consumers are carnivores that eat primary consumers. Tertiary consumers are carnivores that eat secondary consumers.
primary consumers are herbivores and secondary consumers are carnivores so secondary consumers eat primary consumers
The primary consumers on Everest are predators.
Secondary Consumers eat other primary consumers. Primary consumers eat plants or producers.