Insects live in every terrestrial biome, and on seashores. However, no insects exist in the ocean.
bettas are fresh water fish so they do not live in the ocean. they live in rice feilds. what they eat are insects that land on the water. dont feed them wild insects as food when they are in captivity, they can carry infections. i would buy specialy breed insects or procesed food made specificaly for bettas
The only insects in the ocean live in the coastal areas, salt marshes, and tidal pools. These include various fly larvae, midges, some beetles, and several species of true bugs. While these insects may spend some time in the ocean, not all parts of their life cycle necessarily occur in the ocean. Some beetles will live in shallow areas of the ocean as adults, but also come out of the water at times. One interesting group of insects is the Halobites. They are water skimmers that live their entire life on top of the ocean and are found great distances from shore. They lay their eggs on floating sea debris. The best guess as to why there are no insects that live underwater in the open ocean is that insects evolved on land whereas the crustaceans evolved underwater giving them a competitive advantage from millions of years head start in colonizing the ocean. Because the insects developed on land, they would have to redevelop the traits necessary to live in the ocean.
Basically little insects or somethign smaller than it
Some insects aremy but
Skinks will eat dead insects and live insects. They prefer to eat the live insects because they enjoy hunting and killing them.
No. they live underwater. insects live on land.
None. Insects do not live in the ocean, mainly because their breathing organs (trachea) cannot work under water. They don't have lungs, so they can't store air like whales or dolphins either.
Not all insects do.
At the supermarket
Insects that live on their own - as opposed to social insects.
The Atlantic Ocean is where they live.