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Squid and most other mollusks are consumers - they eat other animals.
Squid and most other mollusks are consumers - they eat other animals.
Squid and most other mollusks are consumers - they eat other animals.
== ---- Squids are secondary consumer because they eat fish which would be primary consumers because they eat producers and the squid eat the primary consumer, fish which makes them secondary consumers. the squid eventually get eaten by sperm whale or even humans, making them tertiary consumers. ----
A seal is typically a secondary consumer in its ecosystem. It primarily feeds on fish, squid, and other marine organisms, which makes it a predator of primary consumers. Depending on the specific species and its dietary habits, some seals may also be considered tertiary consumers if they consume animals that are themselves secondary consumers.
yes they eat fish.
Yes
Yes, depending on the species, mackerel are secondary or tertiary consumers, eating smaller fish, squid, shrimp, and other small crustaceans.
Consumers in an ecosystem primarily obtain their food from producers, which are organisms that can create their own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis. Consumers can also derive nutrients from other consumers, such as herbivores consuming plants or carnivores consuming other animals. This transfer of energy and nutrients through a food chain or food web sustains the ecosystem.
There are some 298 different kinds of squid that are classified into 28 families. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on the squid.
It comes from a squid.
The giant squid IS a mollusk. Because octopuses (or octopus) are mollusks, that makes the squid a mollusk because they are exactly alike except they swim different. Plus it has a calcareous shell which means more pieces like one, two, or three pieces.