Krill can eat some small types of zooplankton such as copepods amphibipods and lots more different types of zooplankton
No, I don't believe so. I belive Krill are larger, and live animals.
Yes, but mainly phytoplankton.
Krill are mostly herbivorous although they do eat zooplankton when given the opportunity. Zooplankton does offer a source of protein to the krill.
I think they do because seals eat the krills
no zooplankton dont eat seaweed, and krill eats zooplankton, some whales eat zooplankton, there are also others i cant think of
they eat fish,krills and squid
Krill is a consumer as it eats most photoplankton and some zooplankton
Bluewhales eat tiny shrimp like creatures called krills
Zooplankton eat phytoplankton, other zooplankton, and decomposing matter. "Zooplankton" refers to small aquatic animals. The "zoo-" prefix refers to animals, as in zoology, and zoo (which is short for "zoological garden".
Shrimp eat zooplankton because they are smaller then shrimp
Bacteria can only eat zooplankton when it is dead. Zooplankton are small fish that look like shrimp which are commonly found in water bodies.
They eat zooplankton
phytoplankton