No, Bivalves are not toxic. Bivalves are any kind of animal with two shells, like a clam or mollusk. They cannot bite you, or sting you. If you do not cook them when you eat them, you will get food poisoning.
Some are, some are not. Most mussels attach to rocks and do not move. Some kinds of scallops can move by clapping the shells together.
Yes, most bivalves, if not all, such as clams, have gills.
yes
no.
The species varying diet may include small fish, aquatic insects, worms, frogs, mollusks, crustaceans, bivalves, and polychaetes.
Humans and some sea animals eat bivalves. Bivalves are marine animals such as clams, scallops, oysters as well as mussels.
There are several common bivalves that are often grouped into beds. Clams, mussels, scallops, and oysters are some of these common bivalves grouped into beds.
yes
Heyy, My answer to that pathetic question is that they are bivalves and are classed into Palycepoda. Heyy, My answer to that pathetic question is that they are bivalves and are classed into Palycepoda.
The species varying diet may include small fish, aquatic insects, worms, frogs, mollusks, crustaceans, bivalves, and polychaetes.
Yes as it mostly eats seaweed. +++ No: starfish are either carnivores that prey on bivalves such as mussels, or are filter-feeders browsing on detritus.
Yes because it eats stuff like mussels and sea weed.
Bivalvia is the scientific name for the bivalves.
It has two valves, hence bi....
bivalves
Humans and some sea animals eat bivalves. Bivalves are marine animals such as clams, scallops, oysters as well as mussels.
There are several common bivalves that are often grouped into beds. Clams, mussels, scallops, and oysters are some of these common bivalves grouped into beds.
Bivalves have strong muscles in order to hold their shells closed.
When life gives bivalves sand, they make pearls.
Bivalves move by using a blade shaped muscular foot.
they are called bivalves .(: