the surface zone
Most definitely not.
The immature herring gets eaten by the arrow worm, then the adult herring eats the arrow worm.
Arrow worms primarily feed on small planktonic organisms such as copepods, krill, and other tiny invertebrates. They are active predators, using their well-developed grasping spines to capture their prey. Some species are also known to feed on fish eggs and larvae.
There are worms that are parcites and live of from other animals like tapeworm and ring worm and there are worms that live in soil like earthworms.
Arrow worms are important in marine ecosystems as they are voracious predators of small planktonic organisms, helping to regulate their populations. They also serve as a food source for larger predators, contributing to the transfer of energy up the food chain. Additionally, arrow worms play a role in nutrient cycling by recycling organic matter in the water column.
No glow worms do not live in soil they live in caves[the roof of caves]
most worms live in the far ground so when you are looking for worms dig until you see orange soil that's where most worms live
The most common segmented worms, the earth worm, can live anywhere!
Worms live in poop. By eating poop they have worms and barf
Earthworms live for 8 months-20 years, other segmented worms can live longer.
no
no. worms live in holes in the ground that they dig in the dirt after it rains. wormholes are something in space.