The type of consumer that a chicken is, is an omnivore. Chickens consume all types of foods which make them omnivores.
Ducks do not make energy from sunlight so they are not producers. Ducks do not cause things to rot so they are not decomposers. Ducks also do not eat dead flesh so they are not scavengers. They eat plants and small fish so they are consumers.
A consumer is defined as something that eats living things, such as plants, animals, or fungi. A scavenger eats dead things. To the best of my knowledge, a duck eats manly underwater plants and a few small fish, so I would say it's a consumer.
A duck is considered to be a primary consumer. This is because they feed on the producers in an area.
They are herbivores, which are consumers. They eat grass. also...they are producers, they lay eggs which produces more ducks who lay eggs which produce more ducks and so on ad infinitum
Third-order consumer
Yes. It consumes plants and insects.
secondary consumers
Yes
Herdivore
Scavenger
a scavenger is is the 2nd consumer in the food chain. It eats dead animals. Some examples of scavengers are vultures.A scavenger is a crow or a vulture.a lion
Scavenger is a noun.
yes it is a scavenger
A scavenger is a carnivore (meat-eater) that feeds off of the scrap left behind by predators. Commonly known scavengers are vulchers and hyenas. A marine scavenger in a scavenger that lives in water.
A duck is a consumer because it does not eat dead animals. It eats grass and underwater plants.
Scavenger
Scavenger
concumer and scavenger
it is a scavenger
consumer its primary consumer its a heterotroph
A duck is a consumer. They do not make their own food (producer), and they don't eat waste (decomposer) so therefore they are a producer.(:
no is is a decomposer.
comsumer
scavenger
A scavenger is a consumer that we really call a decomposer since they break down food that is already dead.
Usually, the organism which eats the scavenger, is the 2nd of 1st Consumer.