No. Sharks are either carnivores (most species) or filter feeders (like the whale shark), so they do not eat kelp.
the mothers eat the children, but this is not in every species of sharks
There are three species of sharks known to eat starfish. These sharks are the Nurse sharks, Horn sharks and Port Jackson sharks.
Sharks will eat one another all the time, especially if there is blood in the water and a feeding frenzy. Tiger sharks (for example) will eat hammerheads, makos and other tiger sharks. A shark has one rule; eat and don't get eaten. Sharks will eat sharks of their own species and other species of sharks as well.
Some fish do, and some fish do not. Parrot Fish, Surgeon Fish, Blue Tangs would eat Kelp. Sharks would not. Basically fish that are Herbivores (plant eaters) would eat Kelp. Carnivores would not.
There is no species of shark that do not eat living organisms.
They eat sub species like plankton, And it is called a megamouth shark.
They are hungry. Sometimes they can't get their food so they go and eat other sharks.
Yes, great white sharks are known to eat tuna, as well as eachother and other species of shark. Sharks also eat turtles and seals
kelp does not eat, it is a plant. it photosynthesises
Almost any fish other sharks and sharks of their own species + the very few people they eat in 10 years.
Sharks don't eat guppies. Sharks live in the Ocean, Guppies live in fresh water.