YES.... Not only edible but one of the highest cost per pound fish there is.
It is a carnivore. It eats small fish, small crustaceans and small mollusks.
A woodchuck is a herbivore because they eat wild grasses and berries, they have been known to eat insects too. But are not classified as omnivores, because they prefer grass and berries.
No. They are mutualistic. The Cleaner Wrasse eats bacteria from the Grouper, while the Grouper provides the food source. The Grouper arrives at the cleaner wrasse and the wrasse will clean the groupers mouth. They both benefit because the wrasse eats the bacteria as food and the grouper's mouth isn't packed up with bacteria anymore. Mutualism is when both creatures benefit. The Grouper may visit cleaner wrasse's more then once a day.
Turtles are omnivores.
earwigs are omnivores
omnivores
A woodchuck is a herbivore because they eat wild grasses and berries, they have been known to eat insects too. But are not classified as omnivores, because they prefer grass and berries.
No a grouper is a fish.
What kind of Grouper? The Grouper family is Serranidae.
Yellowfin grouper was created in 1758.
Sawtail grouper was created in 1967.
Depends on the size of the grouper, and species. Reef grouper or giant grouper. Reef groupers are eaten by larger fish like sharks, eels, and rays. Giant grouper can grow to 8 feet and they are eaten by sharks.
Grouper live in every temperate ocean.
A grouper eats many smaller fish and its favorite food would be fish. Grouper will also eat insects and shrimp along with almost any other small animal that comes into the grouper's path. Grouper are often eaten by larger fish.
A grouper protects itself with its fins. The fins on the grouper are like needles, if you touch one, it injects a poison and feels like the sting of a bee.
The coral grouper seeks out giant morays. It actively rouses them by vigorously shaking its body. The move is a call to arms that tells the moray to join the grouper in a hunt. The two fish cooperate to flush out their prey.
The Shark eat the grouper and snapper and the grouper and the snapper eat the conch so if the conch die the grouper and the snapper do not have no more conch to eat they will die and if the grouper and the snapper die the shark will not have the grouper and the snapper to eat the shark will die BY JOHN FERGUSON Date: 29 October 2012
Barracuda, Grouper and Giant Trevally feed on moray eels.