All animals depend on one another for food. Furthermore,we can find this information in food webs. Part of these consumers are carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, or decomposers. The particular animals are coyotes, desert tortoises, meerkats, and mantegna mushrooms. Coyotes are an example of carnivores (meat eaters) because they digest rabbits and rodents, which eats shrubs off of the desert floor. Desert tortoises are herbivores (any organism that consumes only plants) because they eat plant forbs and brittle brush, that are producers. Meerkats are the omnivores. This means that they consume both plants and animals like most humans do. For this purpose the indicated animals live off of eggs and insects hidden in burrows as well as small birds. Mantegna mushrooms are decomposers (organisms that break down substances) absorb dead organisms and non-living organic compounds as their food source. To find their prey, all of these animals have difficulties finding their food. Coyotes search food sources with their significant sense of smell and communication with its pack. Desert tortoises hide in burrows to escape the cold and heat. As a result, they store about a quart of water in its bladder to be used when necessary, and their hard shell protects them predators. Meerkats have adaptations too. Their black eyes act as shades, their chests serve as solar panels. They have strong claws to build burrows that protect them from the weather and prey. Meerkats have the ability to close their ears completely to block out sand, and they are not affected by scorpion vetumn. Mantegna mushroom fungi absorbs nutrients from the organism they are decomposing. The mushroom fungi release enzymes that it decomposes. So then, some of these animals are visitors while others know this desert as their permanent