Table of Contents
- 1 Is a hammerhead shark a producer consumer or decomposer?
- 2 Is shark a decomposer?
- 3 What is a hammerhead shark classified as?
- 4 What is the hammerhead shark role in the ecosystem?
- 5 Are bears decomposers?
- 6 Is a squirrel a consumer or producer?
- 7 Why do Hammerheads have Hammerheads?
- 8 Why are hammerheads important?
Is a hammerhead shark a producer consumer or decomposer?
Tertiary consumers are often the “top predators” in a food chain. This means that no other animals eat them. A great white shark leaps out of the water, catching a seal in its jaws. A shark is a tertiary consumer.
Is shark a decomposer?
These are animals such as sharks (great white and tiger sharks). The things that eat sharks are decomposers such as fungi and bacteria.
Is a hammerhead a consumer?
Habitat and Distribution. The Great Hammerhead Shark is widely distributed in coastal and pelagic tropical waters. It inhabits deep waters, to depths of 300 m, shallow lagoons and coral reefs and and is considered an upper-trophic level consumer.
What is a hammerhead shark classified as?
Chondrichthyes
Hammerhead shark
Hammerhead sharks Temporal range: | |
---|---|
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Chondrichthyes |
Order: | Carcharhiniformes |
Family: | Sphyrnidae T. N. Gill, 1872 |
What is the hammerhead shark role in the ecosystem?
Dr Vincent Raoult has found that Great Hammerhead Sharks are apex predators (top of the food chain) in the coastal ecosystem because they specialise in eating other sharks and rays.
Is a shark a herbivore?
Almost all sharks are carnivores or meat eaters. Sharks live on a diet of fish and sea mammals (like dolphins and seals) and even such prey as turtles and seagulls. Sharks even eat other sharks.
Are bears decomposers?
Bears are another example of consumers. Decomposers are the garbage men of the animal kingdom; they take all the dead animals and plants (consumers and decomposers) and break them down into their nutrient components so that plants can use them to make more food.
Is a squirrel a consumer or producer?
A Squirrel is a Primary Consumer and only in times of desperation will it eat meat and become a temporary Secondary Consumer.
Is a hammerhead shark a mammal?
No, sharks are not mammals. All species of sharks are classified as fish. Sharks do not have mammary glands, and do not feed their young, so are therefore disqualified from being named mammals. Sharks use gills to breath with, as fish do, rather than lungs that exchange respiratory gases.
Why do Hammerheads have Hammerheads?
It’s one of evolution’s most eccentric creations: a head shaped like a hammer. Now, a study suggests that the hammerhead shark may have evolved its oddly shaped snout to boost the animal’s vision and hunting prowess.
Why are hammerheads important?
As an apex predator (with a particular fondness for stingrays), the great hammerhead shark plays an important role in maintaining the health of coastal marine ecosystems. Great hammerhead fins, sold as “Gu Pian,” are highly prized in the Asian fin trade because of their large size and high needle count.