No, the coelacanth is a carnivorous fish. It feeds on other fish and cephalopods.
Coelacanths are carnivorous, feeding mainly on small fish and cephalopods. They are nocturnal hunters, using their sharp teeth to catch prey in the deep ocean waters where they live.
Herbivore - plc
herbivore
it is a herbivore
The antelope is a herbivore.
Coelacanths are carnivorous, feeding mainly on small fish and cephalopods. They are nocturnal hunters, using their sharp teeth to catch prey in the deep ocean waters where they live.
yes, the coelacanth is older than the dinosaurs.
You can catch a coelacanth when it is raining or snowing
The scientific name for the coelacanth is Latimeria chalumnae.
The living coelacanth, Latimeria spp., can reach a total length of 2 metres.
The Coelacanth lives in the Indian Ocean, ranging anywhere from South Africa to India, and Indonesia.
Ovovivipary
Ii is about 154.5 million dollars for this rare species known as the coelacanth
You can catch a coelacanth in the ocean when it is snowing or raining, and is a very big fish.
yes it does
In year 1938.
Gills