According to the list below, tigers would be a trophic level 4 or Top Level Carnivore. Trophic levels are:1st/bottom level) Producers: Organisms that produce their own food such as plants.2nd level) Consumers: These are animals that are herbivores, they eat plants and no meat.3rd level) Secondary Consumers: These are primary carnivores and only eat meat.4th/top level) Tertiary Consumers: These are the creatures at the top of the food chain because they have no predators.
its in the trophic level it lives in.. its in the trophic level it lives in..
Scavengers are on every trophic level
Not sure what yo mean by trophic level. But the classification is called herbivore.
At each trophic level in a food chain, a large portion of the energy is utilized for the maintenance of organisms which occur at that trophic level and lost as heat. As a result of this, organisms in each trophic level pass on less and less energy to the next trophic levels, than they receive.
because the amount of decanposers
its in the trophic level it lives in.. its in the trophic level it lives in..
pandas are first trophic level consumers because they directly eat bamboo which is a producer
As a high-level predator, the Fifth and highest trophic level is the position the Javen Tiger takes. The tiger subspecies reported is extinct.
Scavengers are on every trophic level
The trophic level is where an organism falls on the food chain. Most birds fall on the highest level, trophic level 4.
Third trophic level. It eats insects.
they are tertiary consumers. the first trophic level.
Their trophic level is primary consumer.
Producers make up the first trophic level. A trophic level is each step in a food chain or food web is called a trophic level.
Trophic level efficiency is typically measured by calculating the amount of energy transferred from one trophic level to the next. This is done by analyzing the ratio of energy present in the biomass of one trophic level compared to the trophic level below it. The efficiency of energy transfer between trophic levels is usually around 10%, meaning that only around 10% of energy is transferred from one trophic level to the next.
Its an T1 because its an producer
Each trophic level contains one-tenth as much biomass as the level below it and ten times as much biomass as the level above it.