It is called quaternary consumer.
Quaternary is followed by quinary, senary, septenary, octonary, nonary, denary, there isn't one for 11, and then duodenary.
Hope I helped,
ShadowCain
They are secondary consumers. It is sure that larger animals will eat them like sharks and seals.
In any ecosystem, tertiary consumers are at the top of the food web. They eat small animals like rats, fish, frogs, and small reptiles. Tertiary consumers include jackals, hawks, leopards, lions, and tigers.
Tertiary consumer is a pray of a second consumer.
it is a secondary
It is a Primary Consumer
A wolf is an example of an organism that can function as both a secondary and tertiary consumer in an ecosystem.
Tertiary consumers in the ecosystem are animals who do not eat other of the same organisum aka the tertiaryoganero
primary producer, primary consumer, secondary consumer, tertiary consumer, quaterary consumer.
Tertiary consumer
A secondary consumer is a predator that eats the primary consumer in an ecosystem. Flow of energy in an ecosystem= primary producer>primary consumer>secondary consumer>teriary consumer
If the tertiary consumer dies in a food chain, it could disrupt the entire ecosystem. This could lead to an increase in population of the secondary consumer, which in turn would lead to a decrease in population of the primary consumer. This imbalance in the food chain could have cascading effects on the rest of the ecosystem.
A lamb is not a tertiary consumer. It is a secondary consumer.
part of a food chain with multiple trophic levels. The snake is a tertiary consumer, the frog is a secondary consumer, the insect is a primary consumer, and the plant is a producer. This exemplifies the transfer of energy through different organisms in an ecosystem.
No, a great white shark is a tertiary consumer. Producers are the aquatic plants.
It's a Tertiary consumer. (:
A snake is a carnivorous consumer, specifically classified as a secondary or tertiary consumer in the food chain, depending on the ecosystem. They primarily feed on small mammals, birds, reptiles, and insects.
They are secondary consumers. It is sure that larger animals will eat them like sharks and seals.