Yes copepods do eat zooplankton.
Zooplankto is an animal constituent of plankton; mainly small crustaceans and fish larvae. So you can say they eat that stuff.
and a copepo is a
minute marine or freshwater crustaceans usually having six pairs of limbs on the thorax; some abundant in plankton and others parasitic on fish
No. They eat zooplankton (krill, copepods, mysids, etc.).
Krill can eat some small types of zooplankton such as copepods amphibipods and lots more different types of zooplankton
Yes, invertebrates such as shrimp do feed on plankton. As do other microorganisms such as copepods and amphipods.
carnivores they eat stuff like krill and zooplankton
zooplankton, primarily the tiny crustaceans called copepods, as well as krill, and pteropods, although they are occasionally opportunistic feeders
Its diet consists of zooplankton, including copepods, larval fish, ctenophores, salps, other jellies, and fish eggs
The most abundant zooplankton are copepods and krill, which are tiny crustaceans. They are the most numerous animals on Earth.
Tripod fish eat zooplankton, planktonic crustaceans and nektonic copepods. Tripod fish are deep sea fish that live in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
Copepods eat Plankton and Algea.
Do you mean a Hippocampus Kuda, as in the seahorse? If so, they mostly hunt live food, such as zooplankton and small crustaceans, such as copepods or arthropods, and baby fish.
Tripod fish eat zooplankton, planktonic crustaceans and nektonic copepods. Tripod fish are deep sea fish that live in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
no zooplankton dont eat seaweed, and krill eats zooplankton, some whales eat zooplankton, there are also others i cant think of