jelly fish and sea grass
they eat grass and algea
Marine sea turtles mostly eat fish and jelly fish. The green sea turtle is the only one who is a herbivore, eating mainly sea grass.
Yes, turtles like green sea turtles and loggerhead turtles do eat turtle grass. Turtle grass is a staple food source for many species of turtles as it provides essential nutrients and fiber for their diet. It is important for the health and digestion of these turtles.
A green sea turtle is actually both because when baby green turtles are born, they eat crustaceans, mollusks, jellyfishes, and sponges for the first few months then when adults, they will avoid meat and move on to seaweed, sea grass, or marine algae.
they eat a grass called sea grass staht(the word i misspeled is thats)unda' tha'sea
The baby green sea turtle is eaten by racoons, seabirds and crabs. The only animal that can eat an adult green sea turtle is a shark.
Green sea turtles eat mostly jellyfish.
Green algae.
No, a green sea turtle does not eat sea cucumbers. Green sea turtles are vegetarians when they grow up and other species of sea turtle do not eat sea cucumbers. If a turtle has been really sick for a long time, there will be undigested cucumbers in its stomach. It is hard for a turtle to eat them. Also a sea cucumber is a sea slug, not a vegetable or plant. Sea cucumbers are NOT slugs, but echinoderms, cousins to sea stars and sea urchins. Green turtles eat seaweeds, but have been known to eat octopus and occasionally squid. They also LOVE to eat jellyfish. As far as researchers know, sea cucumbers are not in a green turtles consumption. (reefannie)
swim, bite, eat fish/plankton, surf, get killed and you can eat turtle soup out of the shell made of the body, bounce the real question is "what can't a green sea turtle do?"
No, they eat oceanic vegetation, mainly.
There are different kinds of sea turtles, and they have different diets. These are the ones that I know of: *Loggerhead Turtle: crustaceans, molluscs, and fishes*Green Turtle: turtle grass, and other marine plants*Leatherback: Jellyfish