the shark eats mostly everything in the sea
secondary consumer
A polar is a fourth-level or tertiary consumer. This means that it is at the top of the food chain. Primary consumer in a polar bear's habitat are things like zooplankton. Secondary consumers are the fish that eat the plankton and third or tertiary consumers are the seals that eat the fish.
Lion being a meat eater is second level consumer. Herbivorous are first level consumers.
second level consumer
Elephants are typically placed at the tertiary consumer level in an energy pyramid due to their position as top predators in their ecosystems. They primarily consume plants but may also scavenge on carcasses, which places them higher in the energy pyramid.
no its a top level consumer :)
no its a first consumer
It is a top level consumer
Top consumer
top level consuer
a territary consumer
The blue whale is a tertiary consumer, They feed on krill which are tiny crustaceans that feed on phytoplankton (plants). The whales' only natural predator is the orca which would make the orca the top level consumer.
A top level consumer is a animal for example that eats carnivores or omnivores. NOT HERBIVORES
A third-level consumer is an animal which eats any animal in the second level category, the only animal that would eat the animal would be a fourth level consumer which is not normally found in a ecosystem. You place a certain level consumer on top of the animal it eats. like a mouse would be a first level consumer, since it eats grass which is a producer, then, the owl whcih eats the mouse would be a second level consumer since it eats that first level consumer, rat.
To say that something is 'top-tier' is to say that it is of the greatest level of quality. A example of a sentence using the phrase 'top-tier consumer' is: We are developing a plan that will market towards the top-tier consumer.
A quaternary consumer is a consumer on the fourth trophic level for a biome. Usually it is a top predator or scavenger. Also, they are usually the species on the top of the food chain.
Snakes are one example. The producer for that specific example could be shrubs and grasses, the primary consumer could be grasshoppers, the secondary consumer could be mice, and the third level consumer could be snakes.