Any of a majority of the 1,000 species of the subclass Cirripedia of marine crustaceans that, as adults, are covered with a shell made of hard calcium-containing plates and are permanently cemented, head down, to rocks, pilings, ships' hulls, driftwood, or seaweed or to the bodies of larger sea creatures, from clams to whales. Barnacles trap tiny particles of food with their cirri, feathery retractable organs that emerge from openings between the shell plates. Adult barnacles commonly are hermaphrodites.
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Barnacles live in saltwater oceans, as deep as 2,000 feet. However, there are over 1,200 barnacle species currently known, with about three-fourths of them living in depths of less than 300 feet, and twenty-five percent of them living in the intertidal zone.
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They attach themselves to solid surfaces from the High Tide mark to a depth of about 60 feet, depending on the depth of light penetration. They feed on phytoplankton, so won't be found past where the light can go. Most are only found in salt water, but there are some fresh water species in places like the Great Lakes and Lake Baikal in Russia.
You can find barnacle near seashores or harbors attached to hard surfaces, such as a rock or shell. Barnacles belong the phylum Arthropoda and are invertebrate animals.
This is a picture of barnacles
Barnacles live only in salt water.
although they are different species - barnacles are arthropods and limpets gastropods they share common environments and also attach themselves to their "home" a in similar manner.
Yes.
Barnacles are mostly found on the rocky shore in the high to mid tide area in NewZealand.
Barnacles live only in salt water.
commensalism
On the Beaches
Barnacles.
Barnacles live in the sea.
2 days
barnacles mussels crabs periwinkles
They on a rocky surface in salt water and eat plankton.
I have seen mussels attached to oysters and barnacles.
Both crabs and barnacles have claws and also both shed their external skeleton, the limpets do not.
bacteria, moss, fungi,and barnacle
Barnacles are crustaceans( a type of arthropods)