yes
They are secondary consumers. It is sure that larger animals will eat them like sharks and seals.
Tertiary consumer is a pray of a second consumer.
it is a secondary
It is a Primary Consumer
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.
A lamb is not a tertiary consumer. It is a secondary consumer.
Tertiary consumers in the ecosystem are animals who do not eat other of the same organisum aka the tertiaryoganero
An apex predator and a tertiary consumer are not necessarily the same, although they can overlap. An apex predator is at the top of the food chain with no natural predators, while a tertiary consumer is an organism that feeds on secondary consumers. While many apex predators are also tertiary consumers, not all tertiary consumers are apex predators, as some may be preyed upon by others.
It's a Tertiary consumer. (:
They are secondary consumers. It is sure that larger animals will eat them like sharks and seals.
is a black caiman a second or a tertiary consumer
Tertiary Consumer
tertiary consumer
A lamb is not a tertiary consumer. It is a secondary consumer.
If by tertiary you mean a tertiary level consumer, no, they are a first level consumer because they eat only producers, a.k.a. they are herbivores.
tertiary consumer
i think it means its the tertiary consumer