Arctic foxes do not prey on polar bears and are rarely eaten by polar bears.
A primary consumer.
No, an Arctic hare is not classified as a secondary consumer; it is a primary consumer. Arctic hares primarily feed on plants, such as grasses and shrubs, making them herbivores. Secondary consumers are typically carnivores or omnivores that eat primary consumers. In the Arctic ecosystem, secondary consumers would include predators that feed on Arctic hares, such as foxes or birds of prey.
The Arctic fox is a secondary consumer.
Tertiary consumer/predator
The Arctic fox is a secondary consumer.
The Arctic fox is a secondary consumer and an omnivore.
an arctic fox is a fast animal, it could out run any animal.. except dogs!
The arctic fox is a consumer, and it is a Secondary consumer as it eats rabbits and other small animals. . . and what not
The primary consumers in the Arctic Ocean are phytoplankton and crustaceans that consume the zooplankton. Harp seals are secondary consumers, which mainly eat fish like Arctic cod and Arctic char, and some crustaceans. The top predators, or tertiary consumers, are polar bears and the Orca whale.
Polar bears are carnivorous, hence, they eat things that eat other things. Primary consumers are organisms that feed off of the nutrients supplied, i.e. plants, algae, etc. One creature eats a primary consumer, becomes a secondary consumer, and is eaten by polar bears, making them tertiary consumers.
Yes, and that would be the Arctic wolf.
animal consumers are animal consumers so when a animal consumer eats a animal consumer it is a animal consumer