Any bottom feeders like sea urchins, sea stars, and mussles
humams
waste product,rubble,dust,detritus
Herbivore eats plants Carnivore eats meat Omnivore eats both
deer eats leaves from the tree.. i think deer eats leaves from the tree.. i think deer eats leaves from the tree.. i think
the role of the robin is of a secondary consumer
Zooplankton
Nothing eats a peragrine falcon unless the falcon is dead and decaying. In which it is detritus so it is eaten by decomposers.
Fallen leaves are considered to be detritus. Organisms that eat detritus include snails, millipedes, worms, termites, ants, bacteria, and fungi.
soft coral, detritus (i'm not sure what that is) it think that's what they eat....
Detritus
Neither!An organism that eats detritus is termed a decomposer.A herbivore eats living plants, and a carnivore living animals. Decomposers make a meal out of fallen leaves, animal droppings, animal corpses, dead plants, whatever is in the compost heap, and so on.
Yes as it mostly eats seaweed. +++ No: starfish are either carnivores that prey on bivalves such as mussels, or are filter-feeders browsing on detritus.
Detritus feeders(a.k.a, sapraphages, or ditritivores) ehterotrophs that get nutrients by comsuming detritus**decomposing organic matter**Example___________EarthwormsWoodlice
detritus is formed by microorganisms that are found basically every where
detritus is everywhere. Land,water, and air.
You will be examining the detritus of your homework if you plagiarise your answers.
detritus feeders can not be producers as they feed of the decaying dead living organisms
Detritus. It's what the decomposers feed on/eat/