Blue whales are consumers. They eat other animals or fish. They don't eat, usually, left over food. And they do not eat dead and decomposed animals like earthworms do.
Primary consumers eat plant matter, secondary consumers eat organisms that have fed from the plant-eaters and tertiary consumers are organisms that feed from secondary consumers. Scavengers and decomposers feed on dead animals and plant material, including all kind of food waste. Blue jays have a very varied diet and eat almost anything that could be considered as a food source. When they eat fruits, grains, or berries, they are a primary consumer. When they eat meat, including small invertebrates, they are secondary, or possibly tertiary consumers depending exactly what their food has eaten before being eaten by the blue jay. When they eat table scraps or other food waste they are scavengers.
They are animals that eat carnivores andomnivores. NOT herbivoires
Blue jays are larger, more aggressive, and are colored differently.Cardinals are basicly seed eaters in the finch family, while blue jays are scavengers, related to crows and ravens.
well it depends if your talking about the Tornonto Blue Jays (the baseball team) or the bird blue jay but both are consumers
No, a blue tit is not a decomposer. It is a small bird that primarily feeds on insects, seeds, and fruits. Decomposers, such as fungi and bacteria, break down dead organic material and recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem, while blue tits play a role in controlling insect populations and dispersing seeds.
Primary consumers eat plant matter, secondary consumers eat organisms that have fed from the plant-eaters and tertiary consumers are organisms that feed from secondary consumers. Scavengers and decomposers feed on dead animals and plant material, including all kind of food waste. Blue jays have a very varied diet and eat almost anything that could be considered as a food source. When they eat fruits, grains, or berries, they are a primary consumer. When they eat meat, including small invertebrates, they are secondary, or possibly tertiary consumers depending exactly what their food has eaten before being eaten by the blue jay. When they eat table scraps or other food waste they are scavengers.
it is the the whole ocean except for polar waters! Also it has producers, consumers, scavengers, decomposers, prey, top predator, and climate. the producer: phytoplanton the consumer: zooplanton the prey: krill, small fish the predator: Killer whale Climate: it depends on season and location
How are blue whales adapted? How are blue whales adapted?
No. Blue whales only mate with other blue whales.
Blue whales are not herbivores. Instead, blue whales are carnivores. Blue whales diet consists of mainly Krill and Fish.
yes they are blue like all blue whales
nothing eats alive blue whales
Yes, whales are consumers. Consumers eat herbivores. Because they eat the animals that eat the plants, they are considered tertiary consumers.
Although blue whales tend to be solitary creatures, the correct term for a group of any whales, including blue whales, is a pod. e.g. A pod of blue whales suggests that multiple whales are together.
A blue morpho butterfly is a consumer. Producers are plants and are food for consumers. Decomposers are fungi, ants, beetles, and lichens.
Yes Blue Whales do have babies
Blue whales are not at all harmful.