Spirogyra is a phytoplankton because it performs photosynthesis and behaves more like a plant whereas examples of zooplankton are krill, rotifers, copepods, etc, which act more like animals.
yes they are zooplankton, although technically speaking they are holoplankton
Yes ...Kelp are seaweeds(algae), belonging to the brown algae and classified in the order Laminariales. They are clasified in the kingdom Protista.
they eat it thropw their tiny little mouth hole whih are perpindicular to there bums
Zooplankton as larve.
Phytoplankton.
No.
phytoplankton
Phytoplankton feeds most of the life in the ocean . (:
phytoplankton seaweed coral sea grass
seaweed, phytoplankton, and seagrass
Producers in the neritic zone include seaweed and phytoplankton.
Eelgrass, Phytoplankton and Seaweed
Marine Phytoplankton. Contains over 70% of the world's oxygen.
Consumers such as zooplankton that live in the Marine biome eat the phytoplankton, which is a producer. Zooplankton most probably will eat seaweed and kelp as well!
seaweed,phytoplankton, diatoms,Crill, algea, Seagrass , dinoflagellates (a single-celled organism with two flagella, occurring in large numbers in marine plankton and also found in fresh water), coccolithophores (a single-celled marine flagellate that secretes a calcareous shell, forming an important constituent of the phytoplankton. )
fish
the seahorses' niche is to eat the brine shrimp, phytoplankton and zooplankton in it's habitat (hiding in seaweed) in the sunlight zone.
Kelp, seaweed, phytoplankton, dinoflagellates, diatoms, sea lettuce, algae, etc.