Yes,only some because the whale shark eats only plankton. Its the biggest shark but the friendliest
It goes 1. Plant plankton, 2. Animal plankton, 3. fish, 4. Small shark,Penguin,seal, 5. Big sharks.
Depends on what you mean by "big Sharks". Whale Sharks and basking Sharks eat plankton and Krill. The other "big Sharks" eat bigger stuff. fish, seals etc
the food web for the pacific is: plankton-plant-small fish-big fish-shark-squid-whale So that's the food web of the pacific
The whale shark is currently the biggest fish alive in the ocean, and he only eats plankton. Since he's so big, he needs to eat alot plankton, so he has a big mouth to swallow all of it at once.
Plankton(Not Planktom) Fish(Not Fishies) Big fish(Not Big Fishies) Shark's and Whale's(Not Sharkies and Whalies) 1.Phytoplankton 2.Zooplankton 3.Small Fish 4. Big fish 5.Mammals.
They would stalk their prey, swim up to them unnoticed (usually from behind or under) and sink their razor-sharp teeth into the flesh of their prey and devour it by tearing it into pieces if it was a big one.
Yes, a good example of that is the whale shark located on the east coast of Australlia of the pacific ocean. Unlike most sharks, the whale shark eats plankton and there is a cousin to the whale shark.
The largest fish in the world. They are really, really big sharks that are bluish greyish with White spots.a whale shark is frendly and big and wide it eats lots and lots of plankton to overload its hungerThe whale shark is the largest known fish on the planet.the world's largest fish,up to 50 feet or more,eats plankton.
There's no such animal as a shark whale. However there is a creature called a whale shark, which is a filter feeder. It lives on small stuff like krill and plankton and wouldn't be able to eat anything as big as a seal.
sun, phytoplankton, zooplankton, small fish, big fish, shark otter
There are 17 different species of sleeper shark so it would depend on which species you mean.
In the ocean, a simple food chain could look like this: phytoplankton (producer) is consumed by zooplankton (primary consumer), which is then eaten by small fish (secondary consumer), which are then preyed upon by larger fish (tertiary consumer), and finally, sharks (apex predator) feed on the larger fish.