Kangaroos are primarily herbivores, feeding on grasses and leaves, which makes them primary consumers rather than secondary consumers. Secondary consumers are typically carnivores or omnivores that eat primary consumers. Therefore, kangaroos do not fit the definition of secondary consumers in an ecological food chain.
secondary consumer
A primary consumer eats the producer, a secondary consumer eats the primary consumer. For example grass (producer) is eaten by rabbits (primary consumer) who are eaten by foxes (secondary consumer).
It is a secondary consumer, it eats rodents and insects which are mostly primary consumers.
it is a secondary consumer
no, a fish is a primary consumer
No, the giant kangaroo rat eats grass and seeds.
No, the giant kangaroo rat eats grass and seeds.
The Kangaroo is the Primary Consumer. So it works like this... Grass Kangaroo Dingo This is an example of a food chain. The Grass is eaten by the Kangaroo which is eaten by the Dingo. The Grass is the Primary Producer, the Kangaroo is the Primary Consumer and the Dingo is the Secondary Consumer. Hope that helps xx
Yes i think it is... yeah im sure it is!
They are normally considered a secondary consumer.
No its a Secondary Consumer
Secondary consumer
A Snake is a Secondary Consumer
they are secondary consumer
It is a secondary consumer.
Secondary
It is a secondary consumer