to feel cool....the sharks are the jocks of the ocean and the remoras are there because they are groupies and to have friends...other crap
and i guess iffu wanna be "scientifereic" they freeload off them, for food and esier moving
Remora fishes have a special adhesive disc that allows them to attach to the shark without being eaten. They feed on parasites and leftover scraps from the shark's meals without harming the shark. Additionally, the relationship between the two species is often mutually beneficial as the remoras help keep the shark clean.
The remora benefits from the shark by hitching a ride, feeding on scraps of the shark's meals, and gaining protection from potential predators. The shark is not directly affected by the remora but may benefit indirectly by having the remora remove parasites from its skin.
Sharks! Really Big Squids! People what live on boats and eat fishes! Fishes what eat other fishes too!
Sharks and remoras don't really live together. Remoras are suckerfish. Remoras just attach themselves to the sharks. When sharks catch their pray, The remora who is attached to the shark eats the leftovers. Sometimes remoras attach themselves to scuba divers.
It feeds mainly on cephalopods, leavened by bony fishes and other sharks so its a carnivore.
It is called a Remora fish.
Sharks do not tend to mind these parasites sticking to them all the time, remoras just stick to sharks to either get around or to eat the dirt off them. Remoras are streamlined so that it will not affect the shark's swimming.
The remora.
Remora
A remora is a type of fish that has a special sucker on the top of it's body. It frequently attaches itself to large fish like sharks, and will feed on the scraps left over when the shark feeds. The remora does not harm the shark in any way, and the sharks do not feed on the remora.
Remora fish eat plankton and plankton organisms
A remora is a type of fish that has a special sucker on the top of it's body. It frequently attaches itself to large fish like sharks, and will feed on the scraps left over when the shark feeds. The remora does not harm the shark in any way, and the sharks do not feed on the remora.
Remora fish and sharks have a mutual symbiotic relationship. Studies have shown that there is a bacteria that grows on the sharks that is potentially deadly to a shark. The remora fish eats this bacteria and gets a meal. The remora fish also gets transportation with a lesser energy cost.
Yes, the remora fish uses its sucker on top of its head to attach itself to the bottom of the shark thereby the shark is protecting the remora from predators.
No, sharks are not jawless fishes. They are Cartilaginous fishes
people can see sharks and fishes at the ocean.
Mutalistic Relationship, both are benefiting. The shark is getting cleaned and groomed while the remora is getting fed and transported. Remoras have suction pads that can stick onto the shark. The Remora gets transported by the shark without the shark attacking.