herbivores, they can get eaten, but dont hunt themselves
The disappearance of large carnivors has caused a population explosion in Mustang herds. In the absence of preditors horses move up on the food chain. They have no natural enemies with the exception of disease and man. In Africa where most of the large preditors are protected by law the zebra population is kept in check. Predation culls the herds, taking the sick and injured first, in order that the strong survive and breed. There are programs now that are reintroducing large carnivors back to their natural habitat. Wolves and bear, if successful, should make an impact on wild horse herds and the Mustangs will once again be where they were meant to be on the food chain.
A Komodo dragon is a predator at the top of its food chain, so it is not considered a food chain in itself. A food chain is a linear flow of energy from one organism to another, showing the transfer of nutrients through various levels of a community. The Komodo dragon would be a part of a food chain as a predator preying on various lower-level organisms for its food.
Since hay is like a plant, it would be considered a primary producer. Primary producers receive their energy from sunlight (not another organism) and are able to provide energy for those that consume them.
Producers, such as plants, are the organisms in a food chain that add energy to every part of the chain. They do this through the process of photosynthesis, where they convert sunlight into energy that can be used by other organisms in the food chain.
The duration of Top of the Food Chain is 1.65 hours.
Horses are in the primary consumer spot on a food chain. That is the level above the producers, aka plants.
yes
Horses
primary consumer
Horses would fall in the meat category my dear...
some horses get SLAGHTERD BY HUMUNS!!!!!! STOP HORSE SLAGHTER
1st it starts with the sun then plants begin to grow then horses then eat the plants
Sea horses eat small shrimp and small fish. Anything they can swallow. They are in the middle of the food chain
There are no horses in Antarctica. It's too cold and there is no food chain for them there.
Disease, some people who eat horses, pollution, a disruption in their food chain...
Well mules with mules they will be just like horses.(They will have alpha mare or alpha gelding and so on and so forth) but when you have mules with horses mules are always on the bottom of the food chain....They will give into what the horses wants them to do.
the horses food is brought to them. . .