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Consumer (food chain)

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Spotted hyenas eating a dead Impala. Hyenas are one example of a consumer.

Consumers are organisms of an ecological food chain that receive their energy by consuming other organisms. These organisms are formally referred to as heterotrophs, which are includes animals, bacteria and fungus.

Classification

Consumers typically includes all animals that rely on predation as a mean to get food. However, herbivorous animals and bacteria and fungus that are parasitic are also consumers. Some carnvorous plants, like the Venus flytrap, that rely on both consuming insects and photosynthesis to receive energy can be classified as both a consumer and a producer.[1]

Levels

A food web showing the organisms and their trophic levels.

Within an ecological food chain, consumers are categorized into three groups: primary consumers, secondary consumers, and the tertiary consumers.[2] Primary consumers are usually herbivores, feeding on plants and fungus. Secondary consumers, on the other hand, are mainly carnivorous and prey other animals. Omnivores, who feed on both plants and animals, can also be considered as a secondary consumer. Tertiary consumers, sometimes also known as an apex predator, are usually on top of a food chain, capable of feeding on secondary consumers and primary consumers. Tertiary consumers can be either fully carnivorous or omnivorous. Humans are one such example of a tertiary consumer.

Importance to the ecosystem

Consumers dominate most of a food chain. Consumers have important roles to play within an ecosystem such as balancing the food chain by keeping animal populations at a reasonable number. Without proper balance, an ecosystem can collapse and cause the decline of all affected species.

See also

References