No, producers.
Bacteria and fungi are the main decomposers in a desert as well as in other biomes.
Bacteria and fungi are the main decomposers in all biomes, including deserts.
Decomposers that burrow in the sand and are found in the desert include worms and beetles. There are also millipedes.
ONLY plants can be producers. ONLY bacteria and fungi can be decomposers ALL the rest are consumers.
Both decomposers and consumers gain energy by consuming organic matter. A decomposer, however, only includes organisms that consume dead organisms, while consumers may consume any organisms, dead or alive. Decomposers are counted as consumers, but not all consumers are decomposers.
Producers.
Producers.
Producer organisms are at the base of all ecological pyramids. They are the only organisms which can make their own food (autotrophs). The overwhelming majority of them are green plants and single celled organisms which photosynthesise, though a few are chemautotrophs, that is they get energy from inorganic materials.
You just keep going down the pyramid and then at the very base is the Sunlight that the producers use for photosynthesis.
No.
All pyramids have only one base.All pyramids have only one base.All pyramids have only one base.All pyramids have only one base.
Producers are always at the base .
All pyramids have only one base.
They are triangles.
All pyramids have only one base.
they all have a vertex, or a point, and one base. :-D
No, there are many different types of pyramids. To give a real-life comparison, the Egyptian pyramids are square pyramids, and have 5 faces. Triangular pyramids have 4 faces. (Count the base as one face) A pentagonal pyramid would have 6 faces. (Five on each side, plus the base) A hexagonal pyramid would have 7 faces, etc. (One for each side base + the base's face)