prey- people predator- mice
The otter is both prey and predator, as it is predator to some animals and yet is prey to others. The otter is predator to fish, eels in particular, but will also eat frogs, small birds, eggs and some small mammals. The otter is prey to sharks, killer whales, bald eagles, bears, coyotes, foxes, and other larger animals. The biggest creature to prey on otters remains man and due to over hunting, many otter species were brought to the brink of extinction during the 18th and 19th century.
yes it is... i answered my own question... sad :(
they swin under somthing then they try to trick it, then they find a sunken ship then goes in. then the predator should go in too. the otter escapes while the predator still looks for it in the ship
sea otter
The most part. But sea otter is mostly prey. It's prey to orca whales, sharks, and other ocean creatures.
a otter swims deeply under water and swims fast through obstacles and tight and narrow spaces to confuse its predator
River Otter (3 species), Sea Otter, Giant Otter, Hairy Nosed Otter, Japanese Otter, European Otter, Spotted Necked Otter, Marine Otter, African Clawless Otter, Oriental Small Clawed Otter. 13 species
Mollusks have four main predators. One predator is a starfish. It grabs the mollusk and slowly forces open the shell and eats the animal inside. Another predator is the otter. It mainly feasts off of land snails but it sometimes dives deep for an underwater snack. The two other predators are raccoons and muskrats, but they always eat land snails.
Sea otters are the only species in their genus, Enhydra. However, there are thirteen species of otter in the subfamily Lutrinae; these include the Marine otter, the North-American river otter, the Neotropical river otter, the Southern river otter, the Eurasian otter, the Hairy-nosed otter, the Asian small-clawed otter, the African clawless otter, the Congo clawless otter, the Giant otter, the Smooth-coated otter, the Spotted-necked otter, and (of course) the Sea otter.
hello other otter
I think mammals... but I am not 100% sure...