Many animals eat mollusks, worms, and small crabs, including various species of birds, fish, and mammals. For instance, shorebirds like sandpipers and gulls often forage for these creatures along tidal zones. Additionally, many fish, such as flounder and snapper, consume them as part of their diet. Crabs themselves are also known to be opportunistic feeders, sometimes eating smaller crabs and mollusks.
They will eat worms, small fish, clams, crabs, mollusks and shrimp.
They eat shrimp,mollusks, small fish,crabs, and worms
They eat worms, mollusks and seaweed.
Crabs, worms, mollusks, prawns, and fish.
Some examples of beach consumers would be any animal, such as mollusks, seagulls, crabs and worms.
Flounders are carnivorous fish that eat a variety of small marine creatures such as shrimp, crabs, worms, and small fish. They are ambush predators, lying camouflaged on the ocean floor and striking at passing prey by quickly lunging and sucking them into their mouths.
small fish, shrimp, lobsters, worms, crabs, and mollusks. Many of these creatures roam around day and night, so they aren't hard to find.
No,because I searched a horseshoe crab and it said they burrow for worms and mollusks.
Horseshoe crabs (family Limulidae) eat worms, mollusks, crustaceans, and small fish, and other bottom feeding organisms, and may scavenge on carcasses of fish and other animals.(Horseshoe crabs have similar characteristics, but are not true crustaceans.)
Mudskippers are carnivores. They eat small crabs, worms and insects.
No, Horseshoe crabs are NOT herbavores. Horseshoe crabseat worms, mollusks, crustaceans, and small fish, and other bottom feeding organisms, and may scavenge on carcasses of fish and other animals.
Red Knots primarily feed on marine invertebrates such as small crabs, mollusks, and marine worms. During migration, they also consume a variety of insects and plant matter to supplement their diet.