No, they live in the ocean
puffins eat fish fish eat zoo plankton zoo plankton eat phytoplankton phytoplankton fix nutrients using energy from the sun. puffins eat fish fish eat zoo plankton zoo plankton eat phytoplankton phytoplankton fix nutrients using energy from the sun. puffins eat fish fish eat zoo plankton zoo plankton eat phytoplankton phytoplankton fix nutrients using energy from the sun.
Any fish will eat Zoo plankton in terms of survival, if it is bigger than the Zoo plankton.
The plankton eating fish are most likely to live in the warmer and more aerated sections of the freshwater lake. Plankton thrive in areas that are not too frosty.
Fish and bacteria.
Simple answer is NO.
sardines and other small fish
They are eaten by the white shark, then they eat fish, the fish eat zoo plankton, and the zoo plankton eat phytoplankton. So it goes like this:WHITE SHARKMONK SEALFISHZOO PLANKTONPHYTOPLANKTON
No zoo plankton is a living organism and although small it is very important to maintain balance in the food chain as they are primary organisms. some types of zoo plankton are tiny crustaceans and fish larvae. Hope this helped :-)
The Nashville Zoo has many exhibits of salt-water and freshwater fish.
z=zoo plankton
The sun helps to make plankton, fish eat plankton, then other fish eat those fish and so on; basically it's an entire food chain
I'd assume plankton that are kept in a zoo