The ocean food web is a complex network of interactions among marine organisms that illustrates how energy and nutrients flow through the ecosystem. It begins with primary producers like phytoplankton, which convert sunlight into energy through photosynthesis. These producers are consumed by various levels of herbivores, such as zooplankton, which in turn are eaten by larger predators, including fish, marine mammals, and seabirds. This intricate web highlights the interdependence of species and the importance of each level in maintaining the health and balance of ocean ecosystems.
It depends on the options of the animals you are talking about sorry!
they both eat food MUAHAHAHA
hello
they play as food for whales
Producers in an ocean food web are organisms, such as phytoplankton and seaweed, that can produce their own energy through photosynthesis. They form the base of the food web by converting sunlight into organic matter, which is then consumed by other organisms.
it is important to the ocean's food web because some living animals in the food web get energy from sunlight and if there is no sunlight some animals will die and this will make the food web collapse
every two years
probably a whale... but I'm not sure
sun, shrimp, plankton, mosquito fish,
The food web around the Antarctic continent -- no food grows on the continent: it's too cold -- exists in the Southern Ocean. This is a short food chain based in krill.
If you added one or more organisms to a food web, it would be unbalanced for a time and then a new equilibrium would be reached that might or might not include the organisms that were added.
because there are different levels