Yes
Yes, invertebrates such as shrimp do feed on plankton. As do other microorganisms such as copepods and amphipods.
Copepods will eat phytoplankton.
Pipefish are predators. They eat crustaceans, small fish, aquatic insects and insect larvae. Exactly what they eat depends on the species. Smaller ones eat copepods, amphipod larvae, small mysids. Larger ones might eat grass shrimp and fish.
Young octopus eat copepods, larval crabs and larval seastars. Adults eat crabs and fish.
A seahorse feeds on plankton, small fish and small crustaceans such as shrimp and copepods.
Most seahorses are carnivorous, feeding on tiny crustaceans like copepods, mysis shrimp, and amphipods. They use their long snouts to suck in prey.
The sea horse has no teeth, it swallows its food whole. With this, it makes a loud clicking sound that you can clearly hear from a distance away. Its jaws are long and hollow. The seahorse eats live food only. Young seahorses eat over three thousand brine shrimp a day. Some things that seahorses eat are: brine shrimp, chameleon shrimp, copepods, mysis shrimp, rockhoppers, side swimmers, rotifers, mollie fry and guppy fry.
When studying animals it is important to know the diet and predators of each animals. Yes, the Sea stars do eat Copepods.
Some times. They mostly eat copepods.
Manta rays are filter feeders that prey on microscopic organisms such as copepods, mysids (small shrimp-like creatures), and the larvae of fish, lobster, and octopus. An adult manta ray may feed on 60 pounds of microscopic plankton, fish larvae, copepods, and zooplankton in a single day.
Fish, krill, copepods.
Opistognathus aurifrons (yellowheaded or pearly jawfish) has a zooplanktivorous diet in the wild. Stomach content analysis has mostly shown copepods (~85%), with smaller amounts of shrimp larvae, fish eggs, and the like. In the captive environment they can be feed any number of frozen foods, and some specimens may accept pelletized food formulas.