No they are not
No, copepods are not decomposers. They are small aquatic crustaceans that primarily feed on microscopic algae, bacteria, and detritus. They play a role in the marine food web as both primary consumers and prey for various organisms.
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Copepods are primary consumers and feed on phytoplankton, algae, and detritus, making them herbivores in the marine food chain. They play a critical role in marine ecosystems by transferring energy from primary producers to higher trophic levels.
Copepods have adaptations like small size and streamlined body shape for efficient swimming. They also have specialized appendages for feeding and reproduction. Additionally, copepods can produce bioluminescence as a defense mechanism against predators.
Copepods are small crustaceans that primarily feed on phytoplankton, algae, and detritus. Some copepod species are also known to feed on bacteria, other smaller zooplankton, and even some small fish larvae. They play a crucial role in marine food webs as both primary consumers and prey for larger organisms.
Microscopic organisms like protists, algae, and other bacteria are known to consume bacteria in the ocean. Additionally, certain animals like zooplankton, copepods, and some types of fish feed on bacteria as well.
Special bacteria (chemosynthetic bacteria) live there which use the sulfur from the hydrothermal vents to make their own food. Other organisms, such as copepods (and other zooplankton), eat this bacteria. Other organisms, such as snails, shrimp, crabs, tube worms, and fish eat the copepods. Therefore, the number of organisms living in these vent systems are 10,000 times greater than areas in the ocean that do not have hydrothermal vents. These life forms would not be possible without the chemosynthetic bacteria, since sulfur is toxic to almost all other forms of life.
They are tiny fish.
In your mom
Copepods are animals, they feed and reproduce. They are small arthropods. Some species are parasites and will dig into fish and feed on their body fluids, some attach onto the eyes of sharks such as the Greenland shark, and most float through the water eating food particles.
Yes
herring