It is mostly seals, but arctic terns eat fish too. They were also the prey of snowy owls, however snowy owls eat other animals too. They enjoy small birds.
krill. planton, and phyto plankton.
turtles
Yes, however it is microscopic seaweed.
Snow crabs are scavengers and they eat Dead fish or other animals after the other predator is done with it. They also eat algae, seaweed, and other plants
Seaweed does not eat anything. Annabeth C.
Great White Sharks are carnivores, meat eaters, and don't eat seaweed.
The animals living there get their hydration from the things they eat or they eat the snow. The plants get their water from the mound of dirt they live on which is wet because of all the snow around it.
Yes, Arctic foxes eat plants and have even been known to eat seaweed.
abalone
Sea turtles, plankton, fish.
arctic hare
Yes, some snails do eat seaweed. However, depending on the species of the snail, some also eat moss as their daily meal.
they eat berries, mosses lichens, buds, leaves, seaweed, bark, willow twigs polar bears and large bears such as owls eat them
Arctic foxes generally eat any small animal they can find, including lemmings, voles, other rodents, hares, birds, eggs, fish, and carrion. They scavenge on carcasses left by larger predators such as wolves and polar bears, and in times of scarcity even eat their feces. They also eat some plants, including seaweed.
the arctic fox
They probably eat seaweed that grows in their natural habitat.
They consume berries and seaweed, so they may be considered omnivores.
There are various animals that eat arctic moss. For example, it is eaten by many different kinds of migratory birds.
An Arctic hare eats willow twigs, roots, sedges, mosses, berries, tree leaves, grasses, herbs, seaweed, saxifrage, crowberry, dwarf willow bark, shoots, lichens, buds, carrion or the decaying flesh of other animals.