YeS tHeY cAn!!!![im learning this in science trust me] =] =[] <3
A wolf is an example of an organism that can function as both a secondary and tertiary consumer in an ecosystem.
No, they can be both a secondary consumer (rabbits) or a tertiary consumer (eagles or falcons) but that is very rare.
Yes, humans are considered tertiary consumers because they primarily feed on organisms from the secondary consumer level in the food chain. As omnivores, humans consume both plants (primary consumers) and animals (secondary consumers), placing them at the tertiary consumer level in many ecosystems.
Hawks can be either secondary or tertiary consumers, depending on the organism it eats at any particular time. If it eats an herbivore such as a mouse, then it is a secondary consumer. If it eats another carnivore such as a snake, then it is a tertiary consumer.
Why are there fewer top level consumers than lower level consumers
it's a tertiary consumer which are carnivores or meat eaters secondary consumers and omnivores or animals that eat both plants and other animals.
A primary consumer eats the producer, a secondary consumer eats the primary consumer. For example grass (producer) is eaten by rabbits (primary consumer) who are eaten by foxes (secondary consumer).
It is a secondary consumer.
In this food web, the organisms that are both secondary and tertiary consumers are the carnivores that eat other carnivores.
they are both. foxes are omnivorous. they are classified under both primary and secondary consumer
yes. a primary consumer is always a herbivore(-eats only plants) (sometimes an omnivore-eats both meat and plants)and elephants are herbivores. secondary consumers are carnivores(eat meat only).
Omnivores are both primary and secondary consumers.