Portuguese man-of-war eat small sea creatures such as fish and shrimp. It catches the animals using it's tentacles. The poison in the tentacles kills the animal and is put into the eating gland.
Manof was created in 1980.
a Portuguese man of war eats small fish
Plankton.
nothing
The Portuguese Man-Of-War lives in the Indian and Pacific oceans, where they eat small fish and are usually found in swarms.
Most prey of the Portuguese Man-of-War are soft-bodied. They include various fish, fish larvae, cephalopods, chaetognaths, and eel larvae. The bodily structure of the Man-of-War prevents it from easily consuming hard-bodied prey. On average, a Portuguese Man-of-War will consume 120 fish larvae a day.
Portuguese Colonial War happened in 1961.
War of the Portuguese Succession happened in 1580.
The Portuguese Man o' War is Carribean.
The Portuguese man o' war mainly feeds on small fish, plankton, and other small organisms. It uses its venomous tentacles to paralyze and capture its prey before consuming it.
The Portuguese man-of-war will eat pretty much anything that comes in contact with its stinging tentacles. Their long tentacles drag continuously through the water due to currents. The muscles in each tentacle contract and drag prey into the gastrozooids (special feeding polyps that are used like mouths) consume and digest the food by phagocytosis - by secreting a full range of enzymes that variously break down proteins, carbohydrates and fats.They mostly eat small crustaceans, small fish, algae and other members of surface plankton.
Manja! in Portuguese is "Eat!" in English.