Yes, animals are consumers plants are producers.
Primary consumer - eat plants Secondary consumer - eat plant eaters Producer - plants that consume sunlight and store it as chemical energy Therefore, northern pike are fish, so they would be a part of the consumer category because they arent plants.
its a consumer....primary consumer
consumer
That is a Producer and Consumer
a rattle snake is a consumer
The crayfish could be a primary consumer but it matters where it stands in that particular food web.
haha
crayfishes are consumers
crayfishes are consumers
crayfishes are consumers
There are five native species of crayfishes in Nebraska. These include the Northern crayfish (Orconectes virilis), Papershell crayfish (Orconectes immunis), Ringed crayfish (Orconectes neglectus neglectus), Devil crayfish (Cambarus diogenes), and Grassland crayfish (Procambarus gracilis). The Northern crayfish is found statewide. The Papershell crayfish is primarily in the eastern and northern portions of the state, being rare in the Republican and Blue River basins. The Ringed crayfish is found in the western 2/3 of the state. Devil crayfish are found in the east and north. The range of the Grassland crayfish is not well defined but is in the southeast corner of the state. In addition, Rusty crayfish (Orconectes rusticus) were recently found in a couple of lakes in the metro-Omaha area.
The Northern pike is a carnivore so its a consumer.
tertiary
A shrimp is a consumer, because it does not make its own food. A shrimp eats seaweed and some other plants.
Crayfish
That would be the Tasmanian Giant Crayfish, Astacopsis gouldi, which gets to be about 15 pounds, making it also the world's largest freshwater invertebrate. Found only in northern Tasmania, it is now highly threatened by habitat loss.
Crayfish are known as both crayfish and yabbies in Australia. "Yabbies" are freshwater crayfish, often found in rivers, creeks and dams in rural areas.