No, a tube worm is an invertebrate, whereas a true fish is a vertebrate.
Fish can fish for fish, because anglerfish can fish for other fish.
They make food from chemicals - a process called chemosynthesis. Their survival depends on a symbiotic relationship with the billions of bacteria that live inside of them. These bacteria convert the chemicals that shoot out of the hydrothermal vents into food for the worm. Since a tubeworm has no mouth, how do bacteria enter the worm? Scientists have found that, during its earliest stages, the tubeworm does have a mouth and gut for bacteria to enter. But as the worm grows, these features disappear!
Three fish are considered a mess of fish.
yes fish have a backbone
one fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish, skinny fish, fat fish, cat fish
Tube worms shoot silky looking netting onto coral, which makes fish tanks very unattractive. Copperbanded butterfly fish will usually eat tube worms. Wrasse and Dottyback fish will also eat tube worms.
No, it is part of the phylum annelida.
Phillp McCan and phedo bear
It can be considered a secondary consumer.
The accepted scientific name is Acrolophus sp.
The accepted scientific name is Acrolophus popeanella.
The accepted scientific name is Acrolophus plumifrontella.
The accepted scientific name is Acrolophus texanella.
The accepted scientific name is Acrolophus propinquus.
You find giant tube worms living in communities near hydrothermal vents on the Pacific Ocean floor.
The calcareous tubeworm is a marine worm. It is commonly found in the intertidal zone, but may live at depths up to 100 meters.
By Scuba diving down into the sea and try to find a giant tubeworm and record what it is doing or put it in a container full of water and take it back to their lab and record their results. This is a question I had on my science homework.