Bacteria can only eat zooplankton when it is dead. Zooplankton are small fish that look like shrimp which are commonly found in water bodies.
Yes, but they usually eat bacteria (which is a decomposer).
No, only in the fact that they feed on decomposing matter which may consist of zooplankton, but they do not feed on live zooplankton since they are much smaller.
no zooplankton dont eat seaweed, and krill eats zooplankton, some whales eat zooplankton, there are also others i cant think of
Yes, phytoplankton are so small bacteria would be something a phytoplankton could eat.
Bacterioplankton are a type of plankton so small that they eat organic materials including bacteria. It is one of the three types of plankton, phytoplankton, bacterioplankton and zooplankton.
Bacterioplankton are a type of plankton so small that they eat organic materials including bacteria. It is one of the three types of plankton, phytoplankton, bacterioplankton and zooplankton.
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
They eat zooplankton
phytoplankton
they eat diffeint foods
Zooplankton or some kind of bacteria.