Touch. It uses it's "feelers" a lot.
sharks, tuna, and other large fish including dolphins and sperm whales
Potbelly seahorses mainly feed on small crustaceans such as shrimp, copepods, and amphipods. They are known to use their snouts to suck in their prey. In captivity, they can be fed with live or frozen shrimp, mysis, brine shrimp, and other small marine organisms.
The sense of sight is typically the sense that people use first. Vision often provides the initial information about our surroundings and helps us navigate the world.
Sight is the sense that most people rely on the most in their daily interactions and activities. This is because we use our eyes to perceive the world around us and gather information.
The skin is the sense organ we primarily use for the sense of touch or feel. It contains various receptors that detect pressure, temperature, and pain, sending signals to the brain for interpretation.
Yes, some animals, such as pit vipers, can detect infrared radiation using specialized sensors, allowing them to sense heat and locate prey. This ability is known as thermoreception and is essential for survival in certain environments.
A praying mantis uses their legs to cath other insects.
It depends what sense you use those two words, monumental means something masive which could be use in a metaphorical sense to relate to major I suppose.
you use a fuzz
If im not mistaking, Shrimp use their antennas and claws to feed.
The menu said "Jumbo Shrimp Salad" but there was only one shrimp in my salad, they skimped on my shrimp.
The correct plural form for "shrimp" is simply "shrimp," whether you are referring to one shrimp or multiple shrimp. You would say, "I have two shrimp," for example, without changing the word "shrimp" to a plural form.
The cheetah may be the fastest runner, and the peregrine falcon may be the fastest flyer, but mantis shrimp produce the fastest limb movements. Several species of mantis shrimp have club-shaped front limbs that they use to smash open hard-shelled molluscs and crabs. These "clubs" are hinged and usually held in the folded position against the body. The mantis shrimp unfolds its hinged clubs at tremendous speeds to smash their prey. Researchers measured the speed of these weapons at over 23 meters per second. That's about the speed of a 22 caliber bullet. It is so fast that it produces cavitation bubbles in front of the clubs that collapse producing a shock wave: The prey is hit twice, once by tremendous force of the clubs and a second time by the shock wave.
It makes sense that whoever writes the spongebob scripts to use words such as holy shrimp, or tartar sauce because they are ocean related, and since they all live in the bottom of the ocean, this is what they would be a used to. they couldn't use holy cow, for example, because they wouldn't know what a cow is.
Whiting will eat shrimp. In fact, a small strip of peeled shrimp is the best bait to use when catching whiting.
It depends- a lot of flavorings are made out of chemical combinations in labs.
grass leaves etc