Lichens - Elk - Snow Leopards - Fungi Producers Primary Secondary Decomposers(Can't think of tertiary consumer)
there are no decomposers in a tundra
Yes, lichens in the arctic tundra food chain are considered primary producers rather than consumers, as they make their own food through photosynthesis using sunlight, water, and nutrients from the soil. They are an important food source for herbivores like caribou and musk oxen in the arctic tundra ecosystem.
a jungle food chain
Bear Grass----Mountain Goat----- Snow Leopard ----- Humans(maybe)
5 example of a 4 linked food chain
No, it is much to cold for a starfishes body to mentane it's temproture.
coyotes owls cats snakes and alot if ither rodent eating animals
The ice melts and then polar bears can't live their and it messes up the food chain
desert4good
In the alpine tundra, animals such as birds like the American pipit and the horned lark, mammals like the pika and marmot, and insects like beetles and spiders are known to feed on grasshoppers. These animals play a crucial role in controlling grasshopper populations in the fragile alpine ecosystem. Their predation helps maintain the balance of the food chain and ecosystem dynamics in this harsh environment.
it is a food chain that is on land for example lollies are part of the land food chain but fish aren't part of the land food chain they are part of the aquatic food chain.
In the alpine biome, the food chain typically consists of primary producers like mosses and lichens being consumed by herbivores such as marmots and mountain goats. These herbivores are then preyed upon by predators like eagles and foxes. Decomposers like bacteria and fungi break down the remains of dead organisms, completing the food chain.