zebras, wildebeests, giraffes, hawks
A third level consumer is one that eats a second level consumer. Most third level consumers are carnivores or in some cases omnivores. Also, the secondary consumers are carnivores and omnivores.Third levels consumers are just the animals that eat other carnivores.
Primary consumers are located one trophic level above producers on the energy level chart. They are organisms that consume producers or autotrophs in an ecosystem. Examples of primary consumers include herbivores like rabbits, insects, and some small fish.
they are top carnivores, but the exact number depends on the other consumers in the chain. they're the last one.
It is a consumer that is at the top of the food web. Food webs have producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, tertiary consumers, quaternary consumers, and fifth order consumers. Fifth order consumers have to eat at least one quaternary consumer to make it to that level. They do not eat other fifth order consumers and can also eat anything lower than their level.
Penguins are considered secondary consumers, as they primarily feed on fish and squid, which are primary consumers that eat phytoplankton, a primary producer. This places penguins one trophic level above the primary consumers in the food chain.
trophic level one.... the tertiary consumers, or top carnivores
1st level consumers are any heterotrophs (animals that do not harvest food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis) that eat producers (plants, bacteria, things that make their own food). 2nd level consumers are carnivores or omnivores that eat 1st level consumers, and the 3rd eats 2nd, and so on and so forth. Well a 3rd level consumer is a decomposer second is a carnivore first is a herbivore
The next level is heterotrophs that consume the autotrophs and are the primary consumers. Generally, 10% of the energy is based from one level to the next.
The Tropical Savanna is a grassland. And a grassland is one of the six major biomes.
Primary producers (plants, algae) decomposers (worms, fungi) Primary consumers (herbivores) Secondary consumers (carnivores) Trimary consumers (carnivores) usually stops there because of energy loss
A first level consumer is one that consumes producers (plants) directly. First level consumers in the tundra biome would include small herbivores such as lemmings and rabbits, and large grazers such as elk.
one way elephants from the forest differ from savanna elephants is that they are a smaller species of elephant