Snails produce CO2 all the time even if they are alive. It doesn't matter if there is light or not. Animals do not consume CO2 at all but produce it as a product.
There are perhaps millions of people, cars and power plants in a city that produce carbon dioxide as a waste product. In a garden, plants take up and use CO2 and a few insects, bugs and snails make CO2. That means that the city is much worse.
no, Fish like all animals breathe in Oxygen and out Carbon Dioxide.
Snails are mainly consumed of water.
Snails depend on Hydrillas for food and oxygen while Hydrillas depend on snails for carbon dioxide
In the light, snails primarily give off oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis when they are associated with symbiotic algae or when they are in environments where photosynthetic organisms are present. However, snails themselves do not perform photosynthesis; instead, they respire like other animals, consuming oxygen and releasing carbon dioxide. Therefore, in the context of their own metabolic processes, they primarily emit carbon dioxide.
Snails primarily release carbon dioxide (CO2) as a byproduct of respiration. During their metabolic processes, they take in oxygen and convert it into energy while producing CO2, which is expelled back into the environment. Additionally, snails may secrete mucus, but this is not a gas.
Yes, bettas may eat snails as part of their diet, as they are carnivorous and will consume small invertebrates like snails.
Yes, bettas may eat baby snails as they are carnivorous and will consume small invertebrates.
Carbon dioxide is food. I like food. Food is part of nature. Nature is me. So technically, i am food.
Increasing carbon dioxide levels in the ocean can harm marine life such as corals, shellfish, and plankton. This can lead to disruptions in the food chain and ecosystem balance, ultimately impacting the health of many marine species.
snails breath out carbon dioxide as any other human or animal.
Ingredients: Sugar, Lactose (Milk Sugar), Corn Syrup, Artificial Flavor, Artificial Color (Red No. 3), Processed with Carbon Dioxide.