There is no testing that has been done recording the amount of pesticide a mouse will take to kill compared to a grasshopper. The amount of pesticide that it would take would depend on the size of the grasshopper, and the size of the mouse.
There is no testing that has been done recording the amount of pesticide a mouse will take to kill compared to a grasshopper. The amount of pesticide that it would take would depend on the size of the grasshopper, and the size of the mouse.
The mice ingested 10x the amount of pesticide since 10% of what the grasshopper consumed is passed on to the next trophic level, and since about 1 mice eats 10 grasshoppers, that's 100% of the pesticide ingested by the mice.
Theoretically the same percentage in relation to it's body weight, but poison labelled for rodents and insects are different things
A grasshopper has 24 chromosomes in each body cell.
It is the natural phenomena that animals hunt each to fulfill their requirements. Its a food chain . following is an example: plants > grasshopper > toad > snake > hawk.
A bite from a coral snake injecting 3-5mg of venom, is usually fatal. Compare that to the Mojave rattle snake which would have to inject three times that amount. The actual yield from 'milking' a Coral snake would be higher - and would depend on the size of the venom glands in each individual snake.
Each grasshopper only has one labium. The labium is the lower lip which is involved in crushing food into smaller pieces.
Hi
That's where an organism fits in the food chain. Like, a Hawk will eat a snake; a snake will eat a mouse; a mouse will eat a grasshopper; a grasshopper eats plants. The hawk is at the top of the trophic level pyramid in this example.
They don't eat each other at all.
For each step in the food chain, would be classified as a Trophic Level.For example of a 4 level chain.Grass -> Grasshopper -> Frog -> Snake