Sea grass is a producer. If you have a look at a food web it will show you what eats sea grass and the exact definition of a producer.
yah
Manatees
Mangroves are adapted to salt excretion, or they are salt-proof in other words.
The most widespread vegetation within estuaries are mangroves. Some examples of the mangroves that thrive in estuarine habitats are red mangroves, black mangroves, white mangroves, and salt marsh.
fish
Herbivores live in habitats with a lot of vegetation.
They live in both land and water, and low tide they live on land, high tide in water.
Mangroves live in swamps and in coastal wetlands and do not live in deserts.
The desert fox (fennec) does not live in mangroves.
In mangroves.
i only know one animal that lives in the mangroves. It's the mangrove monitor.
Yes
Mangroves are adapted to salt excretion, or they are salt-proof in other words.
Herbivores that live in swamps beavers.
Yes, some of the animals that live in the ocean are herbivores.
salt water
There are three species of mangrove trees: red mangroves, white mangroves and black mangroves. They all live in salty or brackish waters along the coastlines. Red mangrove are usually in the lower/deeper waters. They are the ones with the large prop-roots. Reds and Blacks live in higher edges of the wetland/shorelines.
Some herbivores that live in the Grassland are, Monarch butterflies, Moose, and Deer
Yes, herbivores are organisms that eat plants.