If you mean are they the top predators, then No (as they can be scavengers).
Yes, humans are considered tertiary consumers because they primarily feed on organisms from the secondary consumer level in the food chain. As omnivores, humans consume both plants (primary consumers) and animals (secondary consumers), placing them at the tertiary consumer level in many ecosystems.
Humans are consumers because the food that we make is actually produced by other organisms. Humans consume both producers and a few consumers. When we grow crops like corn, we aren't producing corn cobs, the corn crops are.Only females are producers,since they produce milk for their young. written by Rafael
YES.They are third level consumers and eat meat,and as humans we are technically meat,therefore food to a lion,thus making us vulnerable to them.Hence,they are harmful to humans unless handled properly.
No, pigs are not secondary consumers. They are considered primary consumers because they eat the plants and they are used by humans for food.
Humans are not decomposers. They are consumers.
Third level consumers are consumers that feed on second level consumers. A hawk eating a rattlesnake would be an example of a third level consumer. In a forest ecosystem, snakes are third level consumers. Herons and large fish are also third level consumers.
A 4th order cosumer is the consumer that feeds of third level consumers (kindof a no-brainer answer). 3rd order consumers feed of 2nd order cosumers and 2nd order consumers feed off 1st order consumers and 1st order consumers feed off producers like grass or bushes; plants that make their own energy from the sun... hope this answer is good enough.
No, humans are generally considered to be third or fourth order consumers in the ocean food web. Fifth order consumers would typically be predators that feed on organisms like marine mammals, large fish, or squid that consume organisms lower in the food chain.
A human being is a Third level consumer. A human can eat a second and first level consumer as well. Actually, humans can be both.
true
eats the trird order consumer
third consumers, carnivores, 2nd heterotroph
third consumers, carnivores, 2nd heterotroph
It depends on the environment that you are planning on deriving this data from. But normally there will always be at least three times the amount of producers vs. third order consumers to support enough energy throughout the trophic levels.
A producer may mean an organism that produces its own energy. This means a plant, as they produce energy in the form of sugars from water, CO2 and UV light. A consumer that only eats plants would be a herbivore (an animal that only eats plants), or a fungi that only digests rotting plants.
Insectivora
2nd Order Hetrotroph, Carnivors, secondary Consumers