yes
A wolf is a consumer because it manily eats meat
moss is a producer becuase a consumer eats other animals and plants and moss isnt a animal
Chlorophyll is a green coloring that mostly plants have. Chlorophyll is the reason most plants are green.
No, garden weeds are not decomposers. Their life cycles and natural histories lead them to decompose when their body parts break down. Their role in feeding chains and food webs more properly may be called that of producers that feed consumers in life and decomposers in death.
Spinach is a green plant. All green plants are producers.
No animals, only green plants and algae.
Some green algae are unicellular
Cyanobacteria > Red Algae > Green Algae > Land Plants
Plants, also called green plants, are multicellular eukaryotes of the kingdom Plantae. They form an unranked clade Viridiplantae (Latin for green plants) that includes the flowering plants, conifers and other gymnosperms, ferns, clubmosses, hornworts, liverworts, mosses and the green algae. Green plants exclude the red and brown algae, the fungi, archaea, bacteria and animals.
Yes they are non-green plantsAdditional answerHey, no. There are plenty of green algae!
Yes they are non-green plantsAdditional answerHey, no. There are plenty of green algae!
its that blue green algae niche is providing food for animals
Green Algae is not even classified as plants in the first place yah big dummy!
Well, algae is a producer but i am not sure if it is a herbivore, omnivore, or carnivore but i mould go with herbivore......
Green algae belong to Kingdom Protista. Green algae is a very diverse type of algae. Actually, green algae is sort of similar to plants. The green algae contain two forms of chlorophyll and capture light energy to produce sugar in similar with the plant. However, unlike the plants the green algae are aquatic. The species are named algae because they are aquatic and make their own food.
Green algae are considered the most closely related to green plants, as they share similar photosynthetic pigments and cell structure. The chlorophytes and charophytes groups of green algae are particularly close relatives to land plants.
As blue green algae are not animals, they do not represent an evolutionary link between any forms of animals. However, I'm not sure that I'm understanding your question. B Blue-green algae are Monera, neither plants nor animals nor algae. They share the characteristic with bacteria of not having a nucleus