No, cyanobacteria are not zooplankton; they are a type of photosynthetic bacteria often referred to as blue-green algae. While zooplankton are small, drifting animals that feed on phytoplankton and other microorganisms, cyanobacteria are primary producers that convert sunlight into energy through photosynthesis. They play a crucial role in aquatic ecosystems, contributing to oxygen production and serving as a food source for various organisms.
Algae, Plankton, Cyanobacteria Anyone of those probably
Zooplankton are both primary and secondary consumers. If they eat algae or cyanobacteria they will be primary consumers. If they eat other zooplankton then they would be secondary consumers. Just as people may eat plants thus making them primary or eat meat making them secondary.
Zooplankton are both primary and secondary consumers. If they eat algae or cyanobacteria they will be primary consumers. If they eat other zooplankton then they would be secondary consumers. Just as people may eat plants thus making them primary or eat meat making them secondary.
The cyanobacteria is a consumer
Phytoplankton and zooplankton
no zooplankton dont eat seaweed, and krill eats zooplankton, some whales eat zooplankton, there are also others i cant think of
It is a consumer. It feeds on particles.
phytoplankton are autotrophs and zooplankton are heterotrophs
You catch zooplankton by algae.
Zooplankton is an animal. Its included in the food chain.
There are two types of zooplankton. Permanent and holoplankton
What different categories can plankton be placed into?