Yes, it is a secondary consumer if relating to ecology.
they are consumers
producers
producers
producers
You can look at the tuffs on a lynx's ears.
The lynx is a carnivore and secondary consumer, so it has prey that are not producers. The prey varies by the species of lynx. For the Eurasian lynx, one herbivore is the roe deer, which eats grasses, shoots, and berries.
The Iberian Lynx is from the Lynx pardinus species. It used to be considered a subspecies of the Lynx lynx species but is now considered separate
And kinds!
secondary consumer
I have read that the tufts on lynx's ears help them to hear... they act as hearing aids so they can locate their prey. :)
A lynx is typically a secondary or tertiary consumer in a food chain, preying on smaller animals like rodents, rabbits, and sometimes deer. It is usually preyed upon by apex predators like wolves or bears.
Generally speaking, no. Bobcats are a species of lynx, Lynx rufus. All bobcats are lynx, but not all lynx are bobcats. There are three other species of lynx: European lynx, Canadian lynx, and Iberian lynx. While lynx will eat nearly any meat, and are capable hunters--alone and in small groups--they typically shy away from the scent of their own kind except when mating, so are not even likely to encounter one of their own dead.