Blue leg crabs, turbo snails, tangs, lawnmower blennies, rabbit fish to name a few.
a food chain always starts with a green plant and the arrows show which way the energy travels. e.g- oak tree- catterpilar- blue tit but also, if you properly did a food chain it would start with the sun.
seaweed,reef-building corals, and blue-green algae
Snails Hermit crabs,
seaweed,reef-building corals, and blue-green algae
seaweed,reef-building corals, and blue-green algae
yes it is important to algae in reef building
they eat sea urchins (they pull out the spikes and then eat from the bottom up) I believe, I know this as I'm doing a science assignment right now on the great barrier reef
Yes there is.
red algae
sea anemones protect the clown fish, [as seen in finding nemo], and coral eats algae; mostly. :]
Well The Great Barrier reef in a sense is living as Coral is a living, breathing organism. It terms yes it does support Algae and a wide rang of fish such as the:yellow-faced angelfishesfusiliersblue tuskfishescardinal fishestervalliesgobiesMandarin fishesIn Terms of Plant life, there are 500 Algae including Red Algae and Brown Algae(also known as seaweed) There is also an abundance of Seagrass. There is over 60 species of Seagrass living on the Great Barrier Reef. The Great Barrier is an oasis for the growth of species.
Most do not appear to, but there is at least one species that does. This species in question is known as the Parrot Fish, which feeds on coral and a wide variety of other reef organisms.