No animal can be a producer - producers are plants.
Lions feed on animals that eat plants which are producers.
Sea weed are algae which are the only producers in sea , all sea animals depend upon sea weed directly or indirectly . Nearly 90% animals in sea are herbivores and eat sea weed including zooplankton , most arthropods and most fishes .
Animals that eat both consumers and producers are called omnivores.
No. All animals are consumers, not producers.However, there are certain protists like dinoflagellates, diatoms and algae that are producers and make energy from sunlight.
Some examples of underwater producers include phytoplankton, seaweed, and sea grasses. These organisms can photosynthesize and convert sunlight into energy, forming the base of the underwater food chain.
well it can be aniamls or other types of sea animals that live there
sea otters ARE consumers. All animals that eat either plants (producers) or other animals are consumers.
All animals are consumers, not producers. Only plants and certain one-celled organisms are producers.
No. They are animals that consume other animals (carnivore, and at least second level consumer). PRODUCERS MAKE THEIR OWN FOOD.
No. They are animals like jellyfish and coral.
No. Animals are consumers. Plants are producers.
animals are consumers and plants are producers.
Seaweeds are producers
Only plants are producers. All animals are consumers.
No, sea slugs are not primary producers. They are consumers that obtain their energy by feeding on algae, plants, or other animals in the ocean. Primary producers are organisms like algae and phytoplankton that can produce their own food through photosynthesis.
Producers are almost always green and plants, grasses and algae are examples. Sea spiders don't fit that description so they must be consumers of some sort. If you remember that definition of producers, you will always get the two sorted out correctly.
a get a life