no its a first consumer
Yes, the red-tailed hawk is a secondary consumer. This is because the red-tailed hawk eats the small mammals and birds.
No a hawk is not a first and second consumer
Hawk is a secondary consumer
A praying mantis is a second level consumer.
alfalfa is a plant that cannot be a seconed leval consumer
a hawk is a consumer. It consumes other animals for its food, a hawk doesn't produce its own food.
A quaternary consumer is a consumer on the fourth trophic level for a biome. Usually it is a top predator or scavenger. Also, they are usually the species on the top of the food chain.
Snakes are one example. The producer for that specific example could be shrubs and grasses, the primary consumer could be grasshoppers, the secondary consumer could be mice, and the third level consumer could be snakes.
No a hawk is not a first and second consumer
No, because 2nd level is for herbivorous animals ie grass eating and hawk is not grasseating
The second level consumer would be away from. The hawk would have more arows because it is the most eater.
yes they are
three
Is a goat a second level consumer
hawk is a quaternary consumer.
A praying mantis is a second level consumer.
It's second-level consumer.
Lion being a meat eater is second level consumer. Herbivorous are first level consumers.
second level
alfalfa is a plant that cannot be a seconed leval consumer