producer
Purple loosestrife is a producer, as it is a flowering plant capable of photosynthesis, producing its own food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide.
it is NOT the same thing as what eats purple loosestrife. the answer is: it provides food for several types of insects including weevils and leaf-eating beetles. it is a producer and provides oxygen for the rest of its ecosystem. a niche is how a species relates to other species in an ecosystem, not just what feeds off of it.
It is a consumer.
consumer
producer
Purple loosestrife is a producer, as it is a flowering plant capable of photosynthesis, producing its own food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide.
the puple loosestrife is a producer as well as a consumer. it provides food and energy to some organisms but it also takes the food and energy also needed for other organisms
Purple loosestrife is found in wetlands such as cattail marshes, sedge meadows and open bogs.
Purple loosestrife is considered an invasive species in many areas. It is illegal to plant or sell purple loosestrife in certain regions to prevent its spread. If you are interested in this plant for a garden, look for nurseries that carry native alternatives instead.
The Purple Loosestrife was introuted was first found in europe and asia. Its now found in North American.
a dangerous plant
the scientific name of purple loosestrife is lythrum salicarial
purple loosestrife eat everything in there path the purple loosestrife ae complete monsters that divore everything metal, animals, people, food, and there favorite thing to eat is caramel cheese cake.
it came from your mother
it is NOT the same thing as what eats purple loosestrife. the answer is: it provides food for several types of insects including weevils and leaf-eating beetles. it is a producer and provides oxygen for the rest of its ecosystem. a niche is how a species relates to other species in an ecosystem, not just what feeds off of it.
Lythrum salicaria.
Purple loosestrife arrived in North America as early as the 1800's. Settlers brought it for their gardens and it may also have come when ships used rocks for ballast. Purple loosestrife has spread across the 48 United States, and Canada, with the exclusion of Texas. It is native to Europe and Asia.