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.
Yes, Arctic foxes are secondary consumers as well as omnivores.
Consumers such as Caribou, Musk Oxen, Arctic Hare, and Arctic Ground Squirrels.
A primary consumer.
arctic foxes, falcons
Yes, all animals are consumers. Only plants are producers.
Yes, all animals are consumers. Only plants are producers.
Plants are producers because they produce their own food using the sun's energy.The arctic fox is a consumer and because they eat other consumers and not grass they are called secondary consumers
The Arctic Hare is an herbivore.
Wolves are secondary consumers, humans, then lower carnivores, then come the herbavores, and on the bottom is producers aka plants
arctic hare live in the arctic when other hares don't live in the arctic
how does a Arctic hare camouflage
The Arctic Hare is from the phylum Chordata.