Yes they are because they might be decomposers but decoposers must consume dead body parts
Im awesome...
after the producers
Yes they are
consumers
Humans are not decomposers. They are consumers.
Chicken is a consumer. Producers are (basically) plants, whereas consumers are animals that eat plants or other animals (very simplified).
Consumers are organisms that use other organisms for energy resources, as opposed to producers, which can use sunlight to create their own energy-storing molecules, or decomposers, which get energy-rich molecules from dead organisms. Another name for a consumer is a predator. Consumers can eat plants, animals, bacteria, or just about anything else they are capable of catching. Most animals are consumers, including people. Other examples of consumers are birds, turtles, lions, frogs, and cows.
It depends on your definition of 'worm'. Earth worms and water worms both belong to the Phylum Annelid, if all Annelids are worms then water worms are worms.
What color are worms? Worms are usually a grayish color.
In the grasslands worms and whatever elese there is are primary consumers.
In the grasslands worms and whatever elese there is are primary consumers.
A forest
primary beacuse they eat leaves
Earthworms are both decomposers and consumers. Most other worms are either larvae and are only called worms, while worms like intestinal worms feed off of your food so they are probably consumers.
Yes they are
your mom would know.... boom
Humans are not decomposers. They are consumers.
Some examples of beach consumers would be any animal, such as mollusks, seagulls, crabs and worms.
Yes. A platypus is a secondary consumer. Secondary consumers are animals that eat primary consumers, and although platypuses do not eat fish, they do eat other primary consumers such as crustaceans, insect larvae and annelid worms.
Shrimp, Giant clams, and Tube worms
Other consumers eat comsumers. For example, a dear eats grass and then a a lion eats the dear. Also decomposer eat consumers. the lion dies then worms and bacteria eat the lion.