Aquatic plants are able to photosynthesize and produce food for themselves and serve as a food source for other animals. Therefore, they are producers.
A producer!
No, a great white shark is a tertiary consumer. Producers are the aquatic plants.
no, it is a consumer (most likely primary). an example of a producer is grass, flowers, so pretty much all plants.
Bulrushes are aquatic or marshland plants that produce food through photosynthesis. They help in providing habitats for various aquatic species, stabilizing soil in wetland ecosystems, and filtering water by absorbing nutrients and pollutants.
No. Aquatic plants do not have gills. Aquatic vertebrates, such as fish, have gills.
Aquatic plants live in sea or oceans.
C4 plants are usually not aquatic, as they are more commonly found in dry, warm environments. C3 plants can include both terrestrial and aquatic plants, as they are more adaptable to different environmental conditions.
A sand eel is not a producer; it is a consumer. Sand eels are small fish that primarily feed on zooplankton and small crustaceans, making them part of the aquatic food chain. Producers, such as phytoplankton and aquatic plants, create energy through photosynthesis, while sand eels rely on these producers for their energy needs.
the extinction of the aquatic plants
are air plants decomposers,producer and consomers
The plants that grow in water are called aquatic plants. for e.g. Lotus, Water hyacinth, Water Lily etc.
More aquatic plants are found at marshy places of subtropical zones.