Sand dollars eat tiny particles of food that float in the water, such as plankton.
It feeds off the bottom of the sea on plankton.
No, sand dollars mainly eat small worms and algae.
Sand Dollars are about the size of a grown human hand when fully grown. They cannot eat humans.
No?
Sand dollars live in ocean and they do not eat sugar. The 80% of their diet is crustacean larvea.
YES. THEY EAT ORGANIC PARTICALS
seagulls
Sand Dollars are the carcasses of dead sea urchins, and when alive, they eat though a mouth.
none since sand dollars are actually skeletons of a type of sea animal.
Yes, they sift through sand in search of tiny bits of algae to eat.
Sand dollars cannot eat honey. Sand dollars cannot find honey anywhere in their natural surrounding. They live in ocean beds and if you have one in your aquarium you have to feed it with particular fish foods or else if your tank has other fished it will survive feeding on their wastes.
Feeds on amphipods, worms, sand dollars and young squid
Yes. Their main sources of food are clams, oysters sand dollars and mussels, which are usually attached to rocks or otherwise unable to escape fast. They also eat snails and injured fish, when they can find them.