Yes, all corals are carnivorous and are considered second consumers in the food chain. Some corals go after microscopic food while others can grow big enough to eat things like crabs.
No; all corals are carnivorous.
No, corals are not carnivores. They are actually marine invertebrates that are classified as animals. They are actually classified as cnidarians, which are a type of invertebrate that can be carnivorous, but corals themselves obtain most of their energy through a symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae.
Discosoma mushrooms, zoa and palythoa polyps, colt corals, Kenya tree, all kinds of leather corals and star polyps.
All corals are in the phylum Cnidaria.
Discosoma mushrooms, zoa and palythoa polyps, colt corals, Kenya tree, all kinds of leather corals and star polyps.
yes, the Venus flytrap, the pitcher plant and the sundew are all carnivorous.
No, they are all carnivorous.
Not Really
no
soft corals live deeper water than hard corals because soft corals do not create a hard outer skeleton as the hard corals do.
isnt it all the streams and its fishys and corals and all living things
All arachnids are carnivorous.