You can find Sand Dollars in warm clean ocean waters, inshore yards off the beach. The beach is usually near the opening of a river spilling into the ocean which make the waters nutrient rich. The water may be copper colored due to the river.
The sand dollar's mouth is at the back of the shell. They take in small particles of sea plants and sea animals. The "doves" found inside the sand dollar are actually 5 jaws that crush the food they consume.
You can find sand dollars in certain sea shores like in Maine, USA. Beach combers get sand dollars from ashore and shallow water. They are found living and in large masses on soft sandy sea beds.
Sand dollars are the leftover skeleton of dead sea-star. They are found in most shallow oceans.
Sand dollars can be found in the sea at about 6 feet deep. They lie on the sea floor at 6 feet deep and further out.
On the underside, in the center.
At the beach.
ocean
beaches
No, a sand dollar would be made up of many cells.
A sand dollar was called a geopolitical dollar
here
"Is a Sand Dollar a vertebrate?" No. A sand dollar is not a vertebrate because it does not have a backbone.
You just look around the beach for one.
Yes sand dollar is an echinoderm.
no. a sand dollar is flat.
Click on the link for a picture on a different website.
Horizontial or vertical, depending on where you cut it.
Sand dollar is not a flower. Sand dollar is a flat living marine creature. They are closely related to star fishes.
No. A sand dollar is another living thing that is not plankton.
No, a sand dollar is a invertebrate belonging to the order Clypeasteroida.