an example of a consumer would be a housfly. they consume(eat) the products of other animals/ plants. another would be deer.
The answer to that it is a consumer or a carnivore.This animal has to be at least a secondary consumer, but can also be a tertiary consumer, etc... or a scavenger.
A herbivore is an animal that only eats plants and does not consume meat. Deer, squirrels, chipmunks, cattle, and horses are all examples of herbivores.
A third-level consumer is an animal which eats any animal in the second level category, the only animal that would eat the animal would be a fourth level consumer which is not normally found in a ecosystem. You place a certain level consumer on top of the animal it eats. like a mouse would be a first level consumer, since it eats grass which is a producer, then, the owl whcih eats the mouse would be a second level consumer since it eats that first level consumer, rat.
Any plant or animal that consumes (eats) nutrients (food). EXAMPLES: Birds, worms, humans, tigers, ferrets, cats, caterpillars, etc.
True. Any animal that eats a herbivore can be called a secondary consumer. The reason for this is because a herbivore consumes plants (producers), so the herbivore is known as a primary consumer. The secondary consumer would feed on the primary consumer, which is why it's called a secondary consumer, and the herbivore is called a primary consumer. So the order is - The plant is the producer, the herbivore (which eats plants) is the primary consumer, the animal that eats the herbivore (the primary consumer) is the secondary consumer, and the animal that eats the secondary consumer (the animal that eats the herbivore) is known as the tertiary consumer. If you want to go even farther, the animal that eats the tertiary consumer is known as the Quaternary consumer. An example would be a flower (the producer) that is fed upon by a grasshopper (the primary consumer). A rat or mouse (the secondary consumer) feeds on the grasshopper, and a snake (the tertiary consumer) feeds on the mouse/rat. Finally, a hawk (the quaternary consumer) feeds upon the snake. Thus completing the cycle. A secondary consumer can also be a primary consumer too (a herbivore), if it's able to feed on a herbivore as well as plants. Laura~ This is absoulotley true. I was asking this question too, thanks again.
There are many examples, actually, all cases of a animal eating another animal are the examples of a consumer eating consumer in that all animals are consumer. for example, a sparrow eats a fly.
Any animal that gains energy through the consumption of other organisms is a consumer. Some examples are wilderbeasts, cats, spider-monkeys, alligators, and pumas.
A consumer is pretty much an animal that consumes or eats food, this animal doesnt make its own food like producers such as plants do. Some examples of consumers are: bears, foxes, rabbits, and caribou.
Lion,cheetah,tiger
In terms of animal life and the food chain or the food web, a consumer is an animal that consumes plants or other animals for the benefit of it's own use (i.e. bodily functions). Consumers include deer, wolves, bears, grasshoppers, hawks, etc.In terms of economics, the consumer is the purchaser of a product, be it fruit off a vegetable stand or a purchaser of a car.
bag of chipsphonecomputertoy
mouse,deer,flea,wolf
animal consumers are animal consumers so when a animal consumer eats a animal consumer it is a animal consumer
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An example of a consumer document is a newspaper ad and a nutrition fact label. :D
The answer to that it is a consumer or a carnivore.This animal has to be at least a secondary consumer, but can also be a tertiary consumer, etc... or a scavenger.
all animals are but mostly carnivores and omniores