No, a sea turtle is not a decomposer. Sea turtles are primarily herbivores or omnivores, depending on the species, and they play important roles as consumers in their ecosystems. Decomposers, such as fungi and bacteria, break down dead organic matter, recycling nutrients back into the environment. Sea turtles contribute to the health of marine ecosystems but do not perform the function of decomposing organic material.
All turtles are consumers.
All turtles are consumers.
A turtle is a consumer. Green sea turtles are omnivores. Omnivores eats anything. The turtles eat seaweed, algae, and fish.
its a consumer
# green turtle # box turtle # wood turtle # stinkpot turtle
A Sea Turtle on a Sea turtle doing it
Decomposer
Decomposer
Decomposer
Green Sea Turtle
The leatherback sea turtle is related to the loggerhead sea turtle
A Kemp's Ridley sea turtle is a critically endangered sea turtle.