Plants
Well salt. And minerals and it would have something in it to make the plants grow.
Salt marshes are composed of a variety of plants: rushes, sedges, and grasses.
The Florida salt marsh voles eat insects, snails, crabs, spiders, and sometimes the eggs of seaside sparrows and marsh wrens. This animal can eat more than its body weight in less than 24 hours.
No, dragonflies do not eat marsh grass. They rarely eat plants. This is because they are mostly carnivores that eat other types of insects.
In a salt marsh
Blue Crabs - and other marsh critters. Blue Crabs - and other marsh critters.
Paul L Knutson has written: 'Shore stabilization with salt marsh vegetation' -- subject(s): Shore protection, Marsh plants, Salt marshes
P. Ketner has written: 'Primary production of salt-marsh communities on the Island of Terschelling' -- subject(s): Plant communities, Primary productivity (Biology), Salt marsh plants, Salt marshes
The weather in a salt marsh is beyond my mind.
well they eat plants, fungus, fruit, and bog marsh and swamp resources
The marsh food chain begins with the plants in the marsh. Primary consumers such as insects and some fish and birds eat the plants, then secondary consumers eat the primary consumers. These in turn are eaten by larger predators, such as birds of prey, alligators, and larger fish and turtles.