Crayfish (crawdads), crabs, lobsters, and shrimp are among the more familiar edible decapods.
Other decapods that are frequently eaten although not well-recognized are squat lobsters, spiny lobsters, slipper lobsters, and king crabs; these are often sold as "lobster" or "crab" although they are not lobsters or crabs.
Krill, small shrimp-like decapods, are eaten in Russia and Japan. There are estimated to be between 150 million and 750 million TONS of krill in the waters around Antarctica.
Crabs,Lobster
Prawns
A beach flea is any of a group of various amphipod crustaceans of the family Talitridae, which live on beaches and jump like fleas.
yes they r edible. any type of stalks is edible
A bladdernut is any of various species of large shrubs or small trees, of the genus Staphylea, or Diospyros whyteana, a species of tree with edible fruit.
nope
There are edible wild plants in every state. In Eastern TN you will have various mushrooms, berries, edible greens, cattails, acorns (need to boil them to remove some of the tannic acid) hickory nuts and walnuts. And dozens more.
Any crustaceans (shrimp, krill, etc) that live in the open ocean (off-shore and off the bottom)
Crustaceans don't have any heart
An edible crop is any crop or plant that someone grows that can be eaten.
I do believe that pumpkin flowers are edible, and can be substituted for any squash flower recipe.
yes. the purple plums are edible and any other plums
yes
No. Gray Whales feed on benthic crustaceans that are found on the sea bed. The whale scoops up sediments from the sea floor and filters out edible particles and feeds on them. Crustaceans like Krill, small lobster, shrimp etc would form the food chain of the gray whale.