predator
it can also be called a consumerAnimals have to eat other living things to get the nutrients and energy required to survive and carry out their biological functions. This helps them grow, maintain their bodies, and sustain their overall health.
Organisms that eat other organisms are called consumers or predators.
Because it is a food chain, it is basically the same concept as humans and animals, except with organisms. They are living things, so they need to feed!
No, Herbavore's do not eat living things such as bugs. Insectavores eat bugs.
They do not interact with any non living things. They might eat a carcass of a dead animal but other then that then they do not.
Yes, it does not eat living things.
Consumer
There are alot of living things, or animals, that eat other animals. for example, a timber wolf can eat deer, moose, and other small animals like rabbits and squirrels.
they produces food for other living organism to eat on them and survive
non living don't mind if you eat them.
They are because viruses are a form of micro-organism. so that makes them very small living things. They are roughly 1/1000 of a millimetre in size, and there sole purpose is to eat and reproduce.
We eat other living things, so they provide us certain things that fruits and veggies do not. idk what you mean by how. K-T
All animals eat other living things, either plants or other animals. The only living things that make their own food are plants.
Every living thing (including humans, like you) is on a food chain (i.e. it eats other living things and/or other living things eat it).
prehistoric sharks eat whales, other sharks and mollusks. But the megalodon eats any kind of living organism
True. When you eat, you consume the DNA of other organisms, as DNA is present in the cells of all living things that you consume as food.
An organism that obtains food by consuming other living things is called a consumer. This includes animals that eat plants (herbivores), other animals (carnivores), or both (omnivores). Consumers play a crucial role in the food chain, as they transfer energy from producers (like plants) to higher trophic levels. Examples include lions, deer, and humans.