A scavenger is an animal that feeds on dead and/or decaying organisms. A halibut fish, however, typically feeds on plankton during its first year of life, whereas at two or three years of age, they begin to feed on euphausiids (small shrimp-like organisms) and small fish. As halibut grow, fish make up a larger part of their diet. Besides pollock, sablefish, cod, and rockfish, large halibut also eat octopus, herring, crabs, clams, and smaller halibut. Therefore, the answer is no. A halibut is not a scavenger.
its narwhals not narwars narwhals eat shrimp squid halibut and other crustacean
Shrimp eat plants or single cell organisms
If im not mistaking, Shrimp use their antennas and claws to feed.
Cleaner shrimp eat the parasites from other organisms.
No, they are sea creatures. More specifically, shrimp are swimming decapod crustaceans. its a seafood
prawns
shrimp and plantons
A swimming decapod (ten legs) crustacean
capelin, polar and Arctic cod, herring, sculpin, Greenland halibut, redfish, shrimp, and small crabs
pray: Greenland halibut, artic\polar cod, shrimp, gonatus squid accidentally ingested: wolfish, capelin, skate eggs, rocks off of ocean floor
Some foods high in tryptophan include: soybeans, seaweed, turkey, chicken, halibut, shrimp, turnip greens, and spinach.