well yes it is
Shrimps have poor eye sightand they have very sensetive legs
crabs sea eggs and sea slugs and normally fish live in rock pools and aslo shrimps many people think that yabbies like to live in rock pools but they actually live in dirty water and because the rock pool isn't dirty water it is clean fresh water.
a few red weeds,sych as coral weeds,cn survive in rock pools higher up the shore... apart from the dogwhelks and limpets.
Rock pools are too shallow for them to live in. :)
Fish that are naturally from rock pools will likely blend in with rock pools. The Lumpfish, for example. Or the scorpionfish.
Yes they do, they usually are adapted to survive; both low and high saline content, drastic temperature fluctuations, and without water for long periods of time.
As the tide recedes, not all of the coast is left behind dry. Depending on the type of rock, one can find shallow or deep rock pools. They offer better survival chances for animals and plants that need to be submerged all the time. Because each rock pool is different, they invite different communities. Deep rock pools near the low tide, have few survival problems, whereas shallow rock pools near the high tide, have many. Thus the pool's placing on the shore as well as its depth and size are important factors. Deep rock pools provide shelter from waves, allowing fragile organisms to live on an otherwise exposed rocky shore. Fragile animals are: sea slugs, shrimps, camouflage crabs, sea eggs, small fishes. Fragile sea weeds are: neptune's necklace, pillow weed, cystophora, sea lettuce and many others. For the snails that are able to survive in between high and low tide (periwinkle, nerita, melagraphia, cats eye) a rock pool is not necessarily a better place because their predators are found there (dark rock shell, white rock shell, trumpet shell). Large fish and octopus may find the rock pools too small, lacking oxygen for breathing. Rock pools may collect fresh water during rain storms, which is worse for shallow rock pools high up the shore where organisms must wait longer for the tide to return. Therefore, most rock pools are at the intertidal and backshore area.
Platypuses do not climb rocks. They are not adapted for rock climbing in any way.
Crab
in rock pools
sometimes
Peppa Pig - 2004 Rock Pools was released on: USA: 15 September 2006