Penguins are typically not listed second in a food chain. Penguins are usually higher up in the food chain because they feed on fish and krill, which are lower on the food chain. Penguins also have predators, such as seals and orcas, that are higher on the food chain than they are.
Yes, pollutants like mercury tend to bioaccumulate as they move up the food chain. This means that organisms higher in the food chain, such as large predatory fish, can have higher concentrations of pollutants compared to organisms lower in the food chain. This phenomenon is known as biomagnification.
The second and higher steps in a food chain typically consist of consumers, such as herbivores and carnivores, that feed on other organisms. These organisms further transfer energy up the food chain by eating lower trophic level creatures. Each step in the food chain represents a transfer of energy from one organism to another.
Yes, prey typically occupies the bottom of the food chain or web, serving as a food source for predators higher up. Ultimately, prey can be considered at the end of the food chain in terms of being consumed by predators.
A producer in a food chain on land is an organism, usually a plant, that produces its own food through photosynthesis. Producers form the base of the food chain by converting sunlight into energy, which is then consumed by herbivores and other organisms higher up in the food chain. Examples of land producers include grass, trees, and shrubs.
Mostly plants. Meat would be higher up the food chain.
Consumers higher up on the food chain.
Penguins are typically not listed second in a food chain. Penguins are usually higher up in the food chain because they feed on fish and krill, which are lower on the food chain. Penguins also have predators, such as seals and orcas, that are higher on the food chain than they are.
A predator is an animal the preys on an animal and hunts them down for food. The predator is usually higher on the food chain while the prey is lower on the food chain.
Yes, pollutants like mercury tend to bioaccumulate as they move up the food chain. This means that organisms higher in the food chain, such as large predatory fish, can have higher concentrations of pollutants compared to organisms lower in the food chain. This phenomenon is known as biomagnification.
depends but they are always higher than producers
photosynthesis
Decrease in higher levels.
it means baiscly how feared animal knigdom. the higher you are in the food chain is how sacry u r HEHEHHEHEH
This is biological magnification; the concentration of poison in the environment gets higher and higher as it goes up the food chain. The poisons are kept in the bodies of the animals that eat them. They are not broken down or eliminated. So a predator that is higher up the chain gets a lot of the poison from its food. -Shawney M.
The second and higher steps in a food chain typically consist of consumers, such as herbivores and carnivores, that feed on other organisms. These organisms further transfer energy up the food chain by eating lower trophic level creatures. Each step in the food chain represents a transfer of energy from one organism to another.
Yes, prey typically occupies the bottom of the food chain or web, serving as a food source for predators higher up. Ultimately, prey can be considered at the end of the food chain in terms of being consumed by predators.