Examples of Carnivores Plants and Animals

You may have heard the terms carnivore and herbivore before. But what is a carnivore, and how can you tell if you’re looking at one? Keep reading for helpful definitions of different eating behaviors and examples of carnivores.

What Is a Carnivore?

A carnivore is an organism that mostly eats meat, or the flesh of animals. Sometimes carnivores are called predators. Organisms that carnivores hunt are called prey.

Carnivores are a major part of the food web; a description of which organisms eat which other organisms in the wild.

A carnivore is an animal that gets food from killing and eating other animals.

Carnivores generally eat herbivores, but can eat omnivores, and occasionally other carnivores. Animals that eat other animals, like carnivores and omnivores are important to any ecosystem, because they keep other species from getting overpopulated.

Since carnivores have to hunt down and kill other animals, they require a large amount of calories. This means that they have to eat many other animals over the course of the year. The bigger the carnivore, the more it has to eat. You should make sure that you have many more herbivores and omnivores than carnivores.

Examples-Of-Tertiary-Consumers

Examples of Carnivores Animals:

  • Lion
  • Wolf
  • Leopard
  • Hyena
  • Polar Bear
  • Cheetah
  • Giant Panda
  • Felidae
  • Tigers
  • Sharks
  • Venus Fly Traps

Characteristics of Carnivorous Animals

The characteristics of carnivorous animals are:

  • Carnivorous animals have specialized dentition to hunt and kill prey. For example, baleen whales are considered predators as they hunt krill using their baleen plates as filter-feeding systems. Similarly, most carnivorous mammals use sharp canines to deliver the killing blow. Venomous reptiles use fangs that function like hypodermic needles to inject venom into their prey.
  • Some carnivorous animals such as chameleons and a few species of frogs have long sticky tongues to catch prey.
  • Most carnivores are usually fast as they need to chase and tire their prey.
  • Some arthropods such as spiders use venom to kill their prey.
  • Carnivores do not have the ability to detoxify vitamin A in the liver.
  • The length of the intestine in carnivorous animals is small.

Types Of Carnivores

There are three different types of carnivores, and each type has diets that consist of varying levels of meat consumption.

Obligate carnivores

Obligate carnivores are also called hypercarnivores, which are animals whose diet consists of at least 70 percent meat. Carnivores that eat mostly meat are called obligate carnivores; they cannot properly digest vegetation.

The cat family, including lions, tigers and small cats, for example, are obligate carnivores. Many hypercarnivores, such as some members of the Carnivora order, have heavy skulls with strong facial musculature to aid in holding prey, cutting flesh, or grinding bones.

Many also have a special fourth upper molar and first lower molar. They close together in a shearing action, like scissors, which allows animals to slice meat from their prey.

Hypocarnivores

Hypocarnivores are carnivores that eat the least amount of meat. They consume meat for less than 30 percent of their diet. These animals eat meat, fish, berries, nuts and roots. These animals can also be considered omnivores.

Hypocarnivores have smaller carnassial teeth and larger molars to accommodate their varied diets.

Mesocarnivores

Mesocarnivores are animals that depend on meat for at least 50 percent of their diet. To supplement their diet, these animals will eat fruits, vegetables, and fungi. Mesocarnivores are typically small to mid-size species and often live close to human populations.

Size

The planet’s largest animal is a carnivore. The blue whale can reach 30 meters (100 feet) long and weigh as much as 180 metric tons (200 tons). It feeds by taking huge gulps of water and then filtering out tiny shrimp-like creatures called krill.

The blue whale can eat about 3.6 metric tons (4 tons) of krill every day—that’s about 40 million of the little creatures. The largest land carnivore is the polar bear, which feeds mainly on seals.

Large carnivores include wolves and mountain lions. A large carnivore might hunt down large herbivores such as elk and deer. Medium-sized carnivores include hawks and snakes, and these animals typically feed on rodents, birds, eggs, frogs, and insects.

Examples of small carnivores include some smaller birds and toads. These carnivores may eat insects and worms.

Examples of Carnivorous Animals

Examples of carnivores include land mammals such as the tiger, lion, wolf, wolverine and African wild dog; marine mammals such as seals and the orca; birds such as eagles, owls and shrikes; reptiles such as snakes and crocodiles; and ocean animals such as sharks and squid.

Other Examples of carnivores include:

  • Polar bear
  • Wolf
  • Ursidae
  • Lion
  • Tiger
  • Coyote
  • Brown bear
  • Leopard
  • Cougar
  • Wolverine
  • Cheetah
  • Hyena
  • Red fox
  • African wild dog
  • Jaguar
  • Spotted hyena
  • Ursus americanus
  • Felidae
  • Lutrinae
  • Mustelids
  • Canidae
  • Walrus
  • Snow leopard
  • Grizzly bear
  • Lions
  • Tigers
  • Leopards
  • Jaguars
  • Cheetahs
  • Cougars
  • Bobcats
  • Lynx
  • Wildcats
  • Wolves
  • Coyotes
  • Foxes
  • Hyenas
  • Jackals
  • Bears
  • Polar bears
  • Grizzly bears
  • Black bears
  • Badgers
  • Weasels
  • Stoats
  • Ferrets
  • Minks
  • Otters
  • Civets
  • Genets
  • Mongooses
  • Meerkats
  • Suricates
  • Raccoons
  • Red pandas
  • Tasmanian devils
  • Dingoes
  • Komodo dragons
  • Crocodiles
  • Alligators
  • Snakes
  • Hawks
  • Eagles
  • Falcons
  • Owls
  • Ospreys
  • Vultures
  • Kites
  • Harriers
  • Cormorants
  • Pelicans
  • Herons
  • Storks
  • Kingfishers
  • Shrikes
  • Jays
  • Magpies
  • Ravens
  • Crows
  • Sparrowhawks
  • Goshawks
  • Buzzards
  • Kestrels
  • Peregrine falcons
  • Sea eagles
  • Golden eagles
  • African wild dogs
  • Dholes
  • Striped hyenas
  • Spotted hyenas
  • Tasmanian tigers
  • Marsupial lions
  • Saber-toothed cats
  • Dire wolves
  • Gray wolves
  • Coywolves
  • African leopards
  • Snow leopards
  • Clouded leopards
  • Serval
  • Caracal
  • Ocelot
  • Margay
  • Jaguarundi
  • Puma
  • Fishing cat
  • Leopard cat
  • Rusty-spotted cat
  • Wildcat
  • Black-footed cat
  • Bobcat
  • Lionfish
  • Barracuda
  • Moray eels
  • Anglerfish
  • Great white sharks
  • Tiger sharks
  • Hammerhead sharks
  • Bull sharks
  • African Lion
  • Bengal Tiger
  • Eurasian Lynx
  • Canada Lynx
  • Gray Wolf
  • African Wild Dog
  • Dhole
  • Ethiopian Wolf
  • Arctic Fox
  • Fennec Fox
  • Bat-eared Fox
  • Gray Fox
  • Raccoon
  • American Black Bear
  • Sloth Bear
  • Sun Bear
  • Giant Panda
  • Spectacled Bear
  • Striped Hyena
  • Aardwolf
  • Honey Badger
  • Tasmanian Devil
  • European Badger
  • American Badger
  • African Clawless Otter
  • Spotted-necked Otter
  • Sea Otter
  • African Elephant Seal
  • Leopard Seal
  • Gray Seal
  • Harbor Seal
  • Weddell Seal
  • Antarctic Fur Seal
  • Bearded Seal
  • Northern Elephant Seal
  • Mediterranean Monk Seal
  • American Crocodile
  • Nile Crocodile
  • Saltwater Crocodile
  • Indian Mugger Crocodile
  • Spectacled Caiman
  • Black Caiman
  • Orinoco Crocodile
  • Dwarf Caiman
  • Alligator
  • American Alligator
  • Chinese Alligator
  • Broad-snouted Caiman
  • Green Anaconda
  • Reticulated Python
  • Burmese Python
  • African Rock Python
  • Indian Python
  • Boa Constrictor
  • Green Tree Python
  • Black Mamba
  • King Cobra
  • Gaboon Viper
  • Inland Taipan
  • Tiger Snake
  • Eastern Brown Snake
  • Black-necked Spitting Cobra
  • Death Adder
  • Cape Cobra
  • Black Forest Cobra
  • Mozambique Spitting Cobra
  • American Copperhead
  • Cottonmouth
  • King Brown Snake
  • Blue Krait
  • Banded Krait
  • Common Krait
  • Malayan Krait
  • Boomslang
  • Black Rat Snake
  • Green Sea Turtle
  • Loggerhead Sea Turtle
  • Hawksbill Sea Turtle
  • Leatherback Sea Turtle
  • Olive Ridley Sea Turtle
  • Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle
  • Flatback Sea Turtle
  • Blacktip Shark
  • Great White Shark
  • Tiger Shark
  • Bull Shark
  • Hammerhead Shark
  • Nurse Shark
  • Blue Shark
  • Thresher Shark
  • Mako Shark
  • Greenland Shark
  • Shortfin Mako Shark
  • Sand Tiger Shark
  • Galapagos Shark
  • Lemon Shark
  • Blacktip Reef Shark
  • Whale Shark
  • Dogfish Shark
  • Wobbegong Shark
  • Frilled Shark
  • Goblin Shark
  • Zebra Shark
  • Basking Shark
  • Leopard Shark
  • Manta Ray
  • Stingray
  • Eagle Ray
  • Electric Ray
  • Sawfish
  • Moray Eel
  • Green Moray Eel
  • Spotted Moray Eel
  • Zebra Moray Eel
  • Dragon Moray Eel
  • Snowflake Moray Eel
  • Slender Moray Eel
  • Honeycomb Moray Eel
  • Red-Sea Moray Eel
  • Undulated Moray Eel
  • Snowflake Eel
  • Snowflake Blenny
  • Pike Eel
  • Fangtooth Fish
  • Piranha
  • Wolf Fish
  • Goliath Tigerfish
  • Snakehead Fish
  • Great Barracuda
  • Tiger Barb
  • Arowana
  • Catfish
  • Alligator Gar
  • Pike
  • Muskellunge (Muskie)
  • Northern Pike
  • Longnose Gar
  • Shortnose Gar
  • Florida Gar
  • Needlefish
  • Sailfish
  • Swordfish
  • Marlin
  • Shark Ray (Guitarfish)
  • Black Marlin
  • Blue Marlin
  • Yellowfin Tuna
  • Bluefin Tuna
  • Bigeye Tuna
  • Blackfin Tuna
  • Dogtooth Tuna
  • Bonito
  • Skipjack Tuna
  • King Mackerel
  • Barracouta
  • Japanese Amberjack
  • Atlantic Cod
  • Lingcod
  • Red Snapper
  • Grouper
  • Wahoo
  • Mahi-Mahi (Dorado)
  • European Bass
  • Yellowtail Amberjack
  • Alaskan Pollock
  • Flathead Catfish
  • Wolffish
  • White Sturgeon
  • Black Scabbardfish
  • Bluefish
  • Red Piranha
  • Electric Eel
  • Garfish
  • Pelican Eel
  • Osprey
  • Bald Eagle
  • Golden Eagle
  • Harpy Eagle
  • Peregrine Falcon
  • Gyrfalcon
  • Red-tailed Hawk
  • Cooper’s Hawk
  • Sharp-shinned Hawk
  • Harris’s Hawk
  • White-bellied Sea Eagle
  • African Fish Eagle
  • Martial Eagle
  • Crowned Eagle
  • Black Kite
  • Whistling Kite
  • Egyptian Vulture
  • Himalayan Griffon Vulture
  • Bearded Vulture
  • Cinereous Vulture
  • King Vulture
  • Turkey Vulture
  • Lappet-faced Vulture
  • Andean Condor
  • California Condor
  • Secretary Bird
  • Crested Caracara
  • Common Kestrel
  • American Kestrel
  • Merlin
  • Eurasian Sparrowhawk
  • Northern Goshawk
  • Black Sparrowhawk
  • Gray Hawk
  • Bateleur
  • White-tailed Eagle
  • African Hawk-Eagle
  • Collared Sparrowhawk
  • Long-tailed Hawk
  • Lizard Buzzard
  • African Harrier-Hawk
  • African Crowned Eagle
  • Red Kite
  • Swallow-tailed Kite
  • Short-toed Snake Eagle
  • Fish Eagle
  • Madagascar Fish Eagle
  • Lesser Fish Eagle
  • White-tailed Sea Eagle
  • Philippine Eagle
  • Black Hawk-Eagle

Examples of Carnivorous Plants

Animals aren’t the only carnivores — there are more than 600 species of carnivorous plants, according to the Botanical Society of America.

These plants get at least some of their nutrients by trapping and digesting insects and sometimes even small frogs and mammals. Because the most common prey for most carnivorous plants are insects, these leafy flesh-eaters are also called insectivorous plants.

While most plants absorb nitrogen from the soil through their roots, carnivorous plants get nitrogen from animal prey that gets trapped in their modified leaves. The traps work in various ways.

A Venus flytrap (Dionea muscipula), for example, has hinged leaves that snap shut when trigger hairs are touched. A pitcher plant has a pitfall trap; its leaves fold into deep pits filled with digestive enzymes. And sundews and butterworts have sticky mucus on their stalks that stops insects in their tracks.

Other Examples of Carnivores Plants:

  • Venus flytrap
  • Aldrovanda vesiculosa
  • Drosera capensis
  • California pitcher plant
  • Round-leaved sundew
  • Purple pitcher plant
  • Common butterwort
  • Nepenthes rajah
  • Drosophyllum lusitanicum
  • Sarracenia leucophylla
  • Yellow pitcher plant
  • Spoon-leaved sundew
  • Nepenthes ventricosa
  • Nepenthes ampullaria
  • Nepenthes alata
  • Nepenthes rafflesiana
  • Nepenthes veitchii
  • Nepenthes lowii
  • Drosera binata
  • Cephalotus follicularis
  • Drosera aliciae
  • Nepenthes truncata
  • Oblong-leaved sundew
  • Nepenthes mirabilis
  • English sundew
  • Drosera adelae
  • Sarracenia oreophila
  • Drosera filiformis
  • Pinguicula moranensis
  • Nepenthes bicalcarata
  • Sarracenia psittacina
  • Drosera burmannii
  • Yellow trumpets
  • Nepenthes maxima
  • Nepenthes albomarginata
  • Sarracenia rubra
  • Sarracenia minor
  • Utricularia sandersonii
  • Pinguicula grandiflora
  • Utricularia bifida
  • Nepenthes attenboroughii
  • Drosera regia
  • Utricularia gibba
  • Nepenthes aristolochioides
  • Nepenthes gracilis
  • Drosera capillaris
  • Drosera peltata
  • Nepenthes spathulata
  • Drosera tokaiensis
  • Heliamphora minor
  • Nepenthes villosa

Largest carnivore on land

The largest terrestrial carnivore is the polar bear (Ursus maritimus). Adult males typically weigh 400–600 kg (880–1,320 lb), and have a nose-to-tail length of 2.4–2.6 m (7 ft 10 in–8 ft 6 in).

The male Kodiak bear (Ursus arctos middendorffi), a subspecies of brown bear found on Kodiak Island and the adjacent Afognak and Shuyak islands, in the Gulf of Alaska, USA, is usually shorter in length than the polar bear but more robustly built.

Largest carnivore on land

The largest carnivore overall is the southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina). Bulls of this species – the largest pinnipeds – have an average length of 5 m (16 ft 4 in) and weigh up to 3,500 kg (7,720 lb).

Technically, both polar bears and elephant seals are “semi-aquatic animals” dividing their time between land and water, so some would argue that the southern elephant seal is the largest carnivore on land.

However, while elephant seals always remain close to the water on the shore, polar bears are capable of surviving hundreds of kilometres inland, and indeed are increasingly being forced to as sea-ice continues to diminish.

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