The primary consumers in this food chain would be the birds, as they consume the grasses.
turtles
The cattle egret was introduced to Australia in the 1930s. These birds eat flies, fleas, and grasshoppers. It will even remove fleas and ticks from hides, right off animals. These birds have been successful as an introduced species and have caused little to no harm.
It prevents them getting fleas and other parasites.
It prevents them getting fleas and other parasites.
Fleas are tiny, so they live on furry mammals. They actually suck blood. It would hurt if they were bigger, but since they're so small, it makes a small tickle. This is what causes dogs to itch.
The homonym for "flee" is "flea." "Flea" refers to a small, wingless insect that feeds on the blood of mammals and birds.
A flea is a parasite that feeds on the blood of its host, usually mammals or birds. In a food chain, fleas would be classified as secondary consumers, feeding on the blood of primary consumers (such as rodents) that in turn feed on producers (plants or algae). In a food web, fleas would be part of the interaction between various species of mammals or birds and their respective predators.
fish ofcourse...,fleas,flies,mosquitoes,insects,amphibians,water loving snakes,mammals,birds and animals.
Crabs, birds , turtles , sand fleas , hermit crabs, sand dollars , and a lot of other animals in the sea to ;)
Ticks, fleas, mites and lice are in the desert where they attach to mammals, birds and reptiles and suck blood.
I do not have fleas, but it is possible for humans to fleas. Usually though fleas stick to dogs and cats etc.