Producers are organisms that make their own food using sunlight (photosynthesis) consumers are organisms that eat producers or other consumers and decomposers are organisms that return the dead organisms to their primary components such as oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide
1 : producers , 2 : consumers , 3 Decomposers .
1- producers 2- consumers 3- ??? 4- apex predators 5- scavengers(decomposers) I'm only 11 and my answer is the previous one
E. Producers
Producers and consumers
Producers - Photosynthesizing vegetationPrimary consumers - HerbivoresSecondary consumers - Omnivores or CarnivoresTertiary consumers - Top of the food-chain, usually carnivoresDecomposers - feeds on dead matter on all trophic levels
Seaweed and corral
Producers.
1- Producers- make their own food (plants, photosynthetic bacteria, etc.) 2- Primary Consumers- eat the producers, small (rodents, bugs, etc.) 3- Secondary Consumers- eat the primary consumers (ex: snakes) 4- Tertiary Consumers- eat the secondary consumers, larger, (ex: owls, humans) There are not many trophic levels because only 10% of the energy available at one trophic level is passed on to the next level, and so the amount of energy available after many levels is not able to support many organisms.
1. Producers 2. Consumers 3. Decomposer
The consumer at the top of the energy pyramid is the tertiary consumer. This organism feeds on secondary consumers, which in turn feed on primary consumers at the lower levels of the pyramid. Tertiary consumers are often at the highest trophic level in a food chain or web.
If 2 producers disappeared from a food web, it would disrupt the entire ecosystem. Producers are at the base of the food chain, so their absence would affect the consumers that rely on them for food. This could lead to a decline in population for consumers and subsequent disruptions up the food chain.
Two important decomposers in the ocean food web are bacteria and fungi. These microorganisms break down dead organic matter, such as fallen leaves, dead fish, and other detritus, recycling nutrients back into the ecosystem. This process is essential for maintaining the health of marine environments, as it ensures that nutrients are available for primary producers like phytoplankton. By decomposing organic material, these organisms play a crucial role in sustaining the entire food web.