Giant squids can be classified as being both nocturnal and diurnal. These animals do hunt for their food during nighttime hours. However, giant squids lack eyelids and are very susceptible to the sunlight when it triggers their brain to begin working.
Most sea sponges do not hunt, do not sleep, and do not move to catch prey. They are neither nocturnal, diurnal, or crepuscular. The few species that are carnivorous trap prey with sticky threads or spicules, and tend to live in darkened caves where they feed around the clock.
diurnal they hunt in the night
-- Hunting at night would make them nocturnal. --
yes it is...and no it isn't. a squid has no eyelid. it usually does its hunting during the night though.
the answer is no
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Sperm whales
Monarch butterflies are diurnal; they do everything during the day :)
Wallabies are most active around dusk and dawn but yes they are nocturnals so don't worry.
Giant squids are to be in the wild. They are not to friendly to people.
little squids
a giant squids prey is the size of a sperm whale
The habitat for both giant squids & small squids is mainly in the ocean, because that is where they get their food from, & that is where they are able to live.
No, they reproduce by laying eggs.
Yes. Giant squids can even kill great white sharks.
There have been reports of huge dead squids but one has never been seen live.
No
they never meet up in the wild that much because giant squids favor deeper water, but if they met a penguin has no chance of surviving.
They are different creatures
yes
yes they do!!!