yes
They're filter feeders
Non-vertebrate chordates are those animals that have a notochord but no true backbone. There are two groups known as the tunicates and lancelets. Tunicates include sea squirts and salps. Lancelets are a group of burrowing filter feeders that live on the ocean floor.
Lancelets are marine animals commonly found in sandy or muddy seabeds along the shallow coastal waters of tropical and temperate seas. They burrow into the sediment, often near coral reefs or seagrass beds.
Yes, sponges are filter feeders. I also believe they were the first filter feeders.
A lancelet is fishlike and is usually about 1 inch long with a transparent body that is tapered at both ends. They are filter feeders and have no brain, eyes, or heart. Lancelets are definitely living.
Clams are filter feeders because they filter stuff.
No, filter feeders in general do not have teeth. Piranha do not filter their food.
filter feeders! : )
Filter feeders and fluid feeders are alike in a great number of ways. These animals both sift for food to eat.
Filter feeders are called filter feeders so they suck in water and eat the tiny plankton in the oceanwith there tiny filter hairs.
Filter feeders and fluid feeders are alike in a great number of ways. These animals both sift for food to eat.
Tunicates and lancelets are invertebrates, while the other chordates are vertebrates.During their embryonic stage they have a flexible cord that supports their bodies which disappears in the adult stage. Some of these develop bones surrounding the cord in the adult stage rather than have it disappear.