Environmental Sciences, asked by Ketan8986, 1 year ago

What do decomposers and scavengers have in common?

Answers

Answered by aryandeshmukh9pd4kzl
7

Trophic Levels:

The trophic level of an animal tells you where that animal stands on the food chain. Consumers eat other organisms, for example, while producers make their own energy. Yet there are a number of different categories of animals within the major trophic level distinctions. Two of these categories are decomposers and scavengers.

Answer and Explanation:

Decomposers and scavengers are both types of consumers because they do not produce their own energy. Specifically, both of these types of organisms eat dead animals. Decomposers consume dead animals and plants and turn them back into their original chemical elements, which are then returned to the soil. Scavengers eat dead animals but do not break them down the way decomposers do. Scavengers produce waste the way most animals do, and this waste is then broken down by decomposers. Both scavengers and decomposers are vital for keeping ecosystems clean and preventing the buildup of dead organisms.

Answered by marieopinion92
4

Decomposers and scavengers are both consumers and they also both eat things that are already dead.

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