Corals are both producers (they have symbiotic plants living in them) and consumers (herbivores/carnivores) as they filter feed on plankton.
hello bro how you doin out in the hood
what are differences between producers & decomposers
barramudi ,trigger fish , parrot fish, surgeon fish , lobsters ,sea turtles
Some examples of sea decomposers are fungi and bacteria. They play an important role in the release of the last nutrients and minerals from organics and reprocessing them back to the ecosystem.
sea urchins are one example of secondary consumers in the marine biome ?
hello bro how you doin out in the hood
coral polyps and sea plants
They are decomposers.
Seaweeds are producers
Copepods are collections of small crustaceans that belong to the sea. No, copepods are not decomposers; they are primary consumers.
No , kelps are not decomposers . Kelps are brown algae and act as producers in sea .fungi and bacteria are decomposers .
ploop
Most likely, bacterias are decomposers, not producers. However, there are some bacterias that are autotrophs, but not necessarily producers.
sea turtles are consumers. Just in case you didn't know, producers make their own food. All plants (as far as I'm aware of) do this using photosynthesis, including plants like venus fly traps. Consumers eat producers or eat organisms that eat producers.
sea otters ARE consumers. All animals that eat either plants (producers) or other animals are consumers.
a consumer. producers are only plants. but if you said a sea snail.... it would be the same
some producers that live in the are seaweed, kelp, eel grass, algae, photo plankton and coral's are some plant in the sea.