Polar bears are tertiary consumers.
It is a primary consumer.
A primary oocyte divides into a secondary oocyte and a polar body during meiosis I. The secondary oocyte undergoes meiosis II to produce a mature ovum (egg) and another polar body.
The primary food of polar bears are seals.
The primary oocyte divides into a secondary oocyte and a polar body during meiosis I. The secondary oocyte then goes through meiosis II to produce a mature ovum (egg) and another polar body.
No. Polar bears are tertiary--some may even consider them to be quaternary--consumers.
A bear is a secondary consumer. eats the plant eaters or the primary consumers.
Actually, the polar bear is a tertiary consumer.
The vast majority of a polar bear's diet is seals, which come up for air or are trapped away from holes in the ice.
A polar is a fourth-level or tertiary consumer. This means that it is at the top of the food chain. Primary consumer in a polar bear's habitat are things like zooplankton. Secondary consumers are the fish that eat the plankton and third or tertiary consumers are the seals that eat the fish.
The primary diet of the polar bear is seals.
Arctic foxes do not prey on polar bears and are rarely eaten by polar bears.
It directly consumes animals and plants, and it's secondary because it can eat the products of animals and plants such as milk.