A starfish is a free-moving animal. It can use its tube feet to move slowly along the ocean floor.
Yes. Classes of mollusks which include clams, oysters, and other bivalves are sessile filter feeders.
Predators of jellyfish include fish, sea turtles, pelagic crustaceans, cephalopods, comb jellies, other jellyfish, sea butterflies, pelagic nudibranchs, siphonophore cnidarians, humans, and occasionally, starfish and sea anemones.
Yes, several. Most crinoids are sessile and live their life attached to underwater rocks, as do several starfish species.
a hydra as a polyp is not sessile but when it grows to be a hydra it is sessile
Echinoderms, a group that includes starfish, sea urchins, and sea cucumbers, exhibit a range of mobility. While many species, like sea stars, can move slowly using tube feet, others, such as sea cucumbers, can be more sedentary but are not completely sessile. Some echinoderms, like certain sea lilies, are largely attached to the substrate and display a sessile lifestyle. Overall, echinoderms can be both mobile and, to a lesser extent, sessile, depending on the species.
they are sessile
Sessile means attached. So a sessile organism is attached to a substrate.
Pelagic travels can be dangerous.
Norway Pelagic was created in 2007.
Norway Pelagic's population is 415.
The population of Norway Pelagic is 2,011.