I think Yes, because they are not decomposers since they don't eat dead animals. They are also not producers because only plants produce food for themselves and others.
barramudi ,trigger fish , parrot fish, surgeon fish , lobsters ,sea turtles
A secondary consumer is a small predator that eats the primary consumer. In a pond, secondary consumers may be raccoons, snakes, and frogs.
omnivore
All turtles are consumers.
There are actually alot of secondary consumers in freshwater biomes, such as almost and medium sized fish, (Walleye, Freshwater Drum and more) Also there are also Water Spiders, and other predatory bugs that eat the small fish that eat plants. (Dragonfly Larva and water beetles)
fish, turtles
turtles and fish
Frogs, Fish, bugs, Turtles, etc.
Leeches attaching to fish or turtles
fish,frogs.plants,alge,and turtles are all biotic things in a pond.
I have 2 mud turtles in my backyard pond with a dozen goldfish and small koi. The turtles are too slow to catch the fish but sure wiped out the snail population...
turtles fish plankton and star fish
No, it's probably turtles or bigger fish...
Uhhh... frog, fish, dragonfly, pond skater, bacteria, watersnakes?, turtles,
Ducks, geese, small fish, tadpoles, frogs, turtles and insects.
whale ,shark ,fish,turtles
Cats, birds, dogs, bears, predatory fish, otters, snakes, frogs, turtles, raccoons, etc. Basically if it can get into a pond that is contained and stocked with fish and has a taste for fish, a pond is a buffet.