Yes. Nice question BTW.
Filter feeders and fluid feeders are alike in a great number of ways. These animals both sift for food to eat.
Filter feeders and fluid feeders are alike in a great number of ways. These animals both sift for food to eat.
Yes,Both marine and freshwater mussels are filter feeders; they feed on plankton and other microscopic sea creatures which are free-floating in seawater.
Many mollusks, but certainly not all, are carnivores, including octopii, squids, moon snails, oyster drills, and cone shells.
human fleshdustdogs earsplastictwigsshrimpssnake fish bonesrubberskinThe phylum includes carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, detritus feeders, filter feeders, and parasites in nearly all environments, both aquatic and terrestrial.
Gastropods (such as slugs and snails) and bivalves (such as clams and mussels) are both invertebrate mollusks.
Lancelets inhabit shallow marine waters. They are filter feeders that live in all the oceans in both cool and warm water.
Both humans and sponges are made of millions of cells, both need oxygen to survive, both need water and both produce waste products.
The great white shark, to 23 feet. Only the whale shark and basking shark, both filter feeders, grow bigger.
Omnivores. Think insects. Some eat vegetable matter and some eat other insects and some eat both.
Both humans and sponges are made of millions of cells, both need oxygen to survive, both need water and both produce waste products.
Both are soft