Arctic FoxPurple SaxifrageBlow FlyArctic WolfArctic WillowEarthwormsGyrfalconLichinGrass Arctic HareTundra RoseSedgeSnowy OwlPasque FlowerArctic FoxRough-Necked HawkTundra MossBlack FlyFleasDiamond-leaf WillowArctic MothMagnet Alaskan Tundra WolfArctic GrasshopperMosquitoesPolar BearBrown BearKittiwakesMusk OxPikaLemmingGrey WolfCaribouMooseBlack BearErmineHumanBeluga WhaleGround SquirrelKiller WhaleRed Fox ReindeerSea LionSealSled DogSnowshoe RabbitWalrusWeaselWolverineGrizzly BearHarlequin DuckHarp SealBowhead WhalePtarmiganRavenBlack VoleSnow BuntingSandpiperTernArctic Bumble BeeArctic CodSalmonTroutZoo PlanktonPhytoplankton
The primary consumers in the tundra are the herbivores.
arctic foxes, falcons
whales consume seals
The polar bear and arctic fox.
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tertiary consumer in the prairie is Coyote
Consumers such as Caribou, Musk Oxen, Arctic Hare, and Arctic Ground Squirrels.
Consumers in the tundra biome are typically herbivores like caribou, musk oxen, and lemmings, as well as carnivores like arctic foxes, wolves, and polar bears. These animals have adaptations to survive the harsh cold weather and limited food availability in the tundra.
Nick Steven Camp
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.
Simplistically, from their food. However, the base of the food chains, the producers of the tundra, are the plants such as arctic mosses, which photosynthesise like plants everywhere.
A secondary consumer is a consumer that eats primary consumers. In the tundra, primary consumers include animals such as musk oxen and caribou. The animals that hunt caribou include wolves, and occasionally polar bears.