some are parasite and some are scavengers
They would be 'parasites.'
yes cornovours are consumers.
yes cornovours are consumers.
Herbivores are typically more efficient users of solar energy compared to carnivores or omnivores because they directly consume plants which have already converted sunlight into chemical energy through photosynthesis. Carnivores and omnivores consume animals that have consumed plants, resulting in a less efficient transfer of energy up the food chain. Parasites derive energy from a host organism, so their efficiency in using solar energy is indirectly related to the efficiency of their host.
Arthropods have diverse diets depending on their species. They can be herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, scavengers, or parasites. Some common foods include plants, other insects, decaying matter, blood, nectar, and even small animals.
Tape worms are parasites that eat digested material. I don't think you can classify them as carnivores, herbivores, or omnivores.
human fleshdustdogs earsplastictwigsshrimpssnake fish bonesrubberskinThe phylum includes carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, detritus feeders, filter feeders, and parasites in nearly all environments, both aquatic and terrestrial.
No, raccoons are not parasites, they are consumers. They are technically classified as carnivores. In reality, they are omnivores as they eat a variety of plant and animal matter.
Consumers are every organism that eats something else. They include herbivores (animals that eat plants), carnivores (animals that eat other animals), parasites (animals that live off of other organisms by harming it), and scavengers (animals that eat dead animal carcasses). Primary consumers are the herbivores, and are the second largest biomass in an ecosystem. The animals that eat the herbivores (carnivores) make up the third largest biomass, and are also known as secondary consumers.
Marine Gastropods (snails, slugs) as a group cover pretty much every feeding strategy known. Many use their rough tongue (called a radula) to scrape micro algae off the surface of hard substrate. However, Gastropods can also be carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, scavengers, deposit feeders, suspension feeders and parasites. Some cone shells even hunt small fish!
parasites
The most general answer is a consumer, which is then divided into carnivores (which eat other animals), herbivores (which eat plants) and detrivores (which eat non-living organic material).