Yes.
Yes, there are species of puffers that live in coral reefs.
Some fish eat of the coral reefs, but they do not live on or in the coral reefs. But every fish living on or in the coral reef has a job to do that protects it from the intrudors.
Thousands. No one can ever count them.
there is over 4000 species of fish living in the coral reef
Yes. Jellyfish look like jelly, but they are fish. Coral reefs look like exotic plants, but they are of water species.
coral and fish
Coral-eating fish can threaten coral reefs by overgrazing on the coral, which can lead to coral death and reduced reef health. Their impact can be mitigated by managing fishing practices, protecting key herbivorous fish species, and promoting coral reef conservation efforts.
the habittat of the fish will be gone. and the hose of fish will be gone. because the coral reefs is the habittat of the fish
they over fish so the coral reefs dead
In the deep coral of reefs
a group of fish in the coral reefs is called a school of fish
No, trout do not live in coral reefs. Trout are freshwater fish that prefer cold, clean rivers and lakes. Coral reefs are marine ecosystems found in warm, tropical waters where species such as coral, fish, and invertebrates thrive.