Yes, decomposers in wetlands, such as bacteria and fungi, can have predators. These predators often include protozoa, nematodes, and certain invertebrates that feed on the decomposer organisms. This interaction is part of the nutrient cycling process, where decomposers break down organic matter, and their predators help regulate their populations, maintaining the balance within the wetland ecosystem.
Some decomposers in wetlands are..... Snails, insects, birds, earthworms, etc.
Neither. Squid are predators.
It depends on the species. Insect larvae may be decomposers, predators, herbivores, or parasites.
Snails are capable to live in every wetland. They are adapted to the environment and live as decomposers of wetlands.
A worm is not a predator. Worms are decomposers and scavengers :) Hope I helped
Decomposers, such as bacteria and fungi, break down the organism's remains. Scavengers, like vultures or insects, consume the dead organism. Predators may feed on the scavengers that are consuming the dead organism.
They get it by rain forests and others .. what they also eat is predators
Wasps are not decomposers. They are predators that primarily feed on other insects and play a role in controlling insect populations. Decomposers are organisms like bacteria, fungi, and some insects that break down dead organic matter.
Octopuses are not decomposers. They are consumers.
They are all types of organisms in an ecosystem. Decomposers break down dead organisms, producers create food through photosynthesis, predators hunt and consume other organisms, and consumers feed on producers or other consumers for energy.
Well, first of all there are two E's in cheetahs and no there are no predators foe the cheetahs because it is on top of the food chain. But when a cheetah dies the decomposers decompose it.
1- producers 2- consumers 3- ??? 4- apex predators 5- scavengers(decomposers) I'm only 11 and my answer is the previous one