yes ther is ther onlely little seaweed and you can faind it at the low tides
seaweed
The euphotic zone
plankton, mossses, and seaweed
The Arctic fox is an omnivore as it does include some plants in its diet, including seaweed.
small mammals, fish, berries, and seaweed
Yes, Arctic foxes eat plants and have even been known to eat seaweed.
Yes, they do. Some examples are Arctic Cod, which eats Zooplankton, and a walrus which eats seaweed.
Arctic animals that eat seaweed include walruses, some species of seals, and certain species of fish such as the Arctic cod and the Arctic char. These animals rely on seaweed as a source of food and nutrients in their cold, harsh environment.
They consume berries and seaweed, so they may be considered omnivores.
they eat berries, mosses lichens, buds, leaves, seaweed, bark, willow twigs polar bears and large bears such as owls eat them
Although not their main food source, seaweed is part of the diet of carnivores like polar bears, arctic foxes and seals. Few fish feed on seaweed because it is difficult for them to digest. However, butterfish has seaweed as part of their diet. Parrotfish and the surgeonfish are also seaweed-eaters. Many crustaceans, invertebrate marine animals with an external skeleton, eat seaweed, including crabs, lobsters, crayfish, woodlice, pillbugs and krill. Mollusks such as periwinkles, a type of snails that live on the seashore, also feed on seaweed attached to rocks.
Yes, Arctic wolves are secondary consumers. In the wild, Arctic wolves' primarily prey on muskoxen and Arctic hares. They have also been found to prey on lemmings, Arctic foxes, birds and beetles.