look on docks on the poles.
Sea urchins are found generally in the sea, however they can also be found in/on rock pools or areas near to the sea.
Urchins is a term generally refering to what is commonly known as sea urchins. They are small animals that live in the sea that look like tiny prickly bushes.
Sea Otters find sea urchins on the ocean floor and break it open with a rock. It will then eat everything except the spines (the insides).
They send out chemicals to find its mate.
No. Sea urchins live in the sea.
Porter M. Kier has written: 'Echinoids from the Middle Eocene Lake City formation of Georgia' -- subject(s): Fossil Sea urchins, Paleontology, Sea urchins, Fossil 'The echinoids of the Middle Eocene Warley Hill formation, Santee limestone, and Castle Hayne limestone of North and South Carolina' -- subject(s): Fossil Sea urchins, Paleontology, Sea urchins, Fossil, Sea-urchins, Fossil 'Four new Eocene echinoids from Barbados' -- subject(s): Paleontology, Sea urchins, Fossil 'Tertiary echinoids from the Caloosahatchee and Tamiami formations of Florida' -- subject(s): Fossil Sea urchins, Paleontology, Sea urchins, Fossil 'Infrabasals in the crinoid Opsiocrinus Kier' -- subject(s): Opsiocrinus 'Tertiary and Mesozoic echinoids of Saudi Arabia' -- subject(s): Fossil Sea urchins, Paleontology, Sea urchins, Fossil 'The echinoids of Carrie Bow Cay, Belize' -- subject(s): Sea urchins
More sea urchins.
sea urchins can either reproduce sexually or asexually sea urchins can either reproduce sexually or asexually
The classification of a Sea Urchin is Echinoidea
there are excatly 3million purple sea urchins
sea urchins eat kelp.
No. Sea urchins are primary consumers and only eat sea weed, algae and kelp.