They live in the Murray River.
we dont know
A marine worm that live in a tube of its own secretion. These animals are filter feeders and can be found in the extreme depths of the ocean.
Giant tube worm was created in 1981.
No, because a plume worm is a feather duster worm, and a giant tube worm is very deep undersea.
possibly.
Whilst the tube worm and the angler fish are the most common, fauna in the ocean trench also varies from bacteria and microorganisms to fish, jellyfish, crabs, lobsters, and octopi.Hope this Helps.
it depends... if you want it to be or not ?
No it's a mollusk
yes the tube worm which lives in coral reefs.
A tube worm is classified as benthos. Benthos refers to organisms that live on or near the seabed, and tube worms typically inhabit deep-sea environments, often attaching themselves to the ocean floor or hydrothermal vents. Unlike nekton, which are swimming organisms, and plankton, which are usually drifting or floating in the water column, tube worms remain anchored to their substrate.
well the Christmas Tree worm has two large appendages also known as tentacles or gills These appendages filter out the phytoplankton in the water and send it down the spirals into their mouth. These also look like Christmas trees where the worm got its name............This worm is actually a tube worm which means a marine worm built a tube around itself! These worms don't live in huge groups and hide in their coral burrows with the slightest shadow or touch. They only live to be ten and can grow to 4cm in length......... Thanks hope this helps.
They eat bacteria