the aquatic snail is a decompser because it gets its food by down wastes and dead organisms.
The scientific name of the apple snail is Pomacea canaliculata. This species is known for its distinctive, large, and colorful shells and is often found in freshwater environments such as ponds and rice fields. Apple snails are also recognized for their role in aquatic ecosystems and their impact on agriculture due to their feeding habits.
The main difference is that snails are mollusks with shells, while tortoises are reptiles with shells. Snails have soft bodies and move by sliding on a single muscular foot, whereas tortoises have hard shells and crawl using their legs. Snails are usually aquatic or terrestrial, while tortoises are exclusively terrestrial.
assuming the plant is alive: B, the plant tube, would have the least CO2 (carbon dioxide) because the plant would use it in photosynthesis. C, with both snail and plant, would have a medium or normal amount of CO2. The snail would use oxygen and produce CO2 as it breathed. The plant would be doing the opposite (using CO2, and producing oxygen) Therefore, A, with only the snail, would obviously have the highest concentration of CO2. With no plant to use any, the concentration would build, and if it was a sealed test tube, the snail would eventually use up all the oxygen in the air and die of asphyxiation.
The scientific term for snail feces is "snail excrement" or "snail droppings." These waste products are produced as a result of the digestive process in snails.
You can identify the type of snail by looking at its shell shape, color, size, and overall appearance. You can also consult field guides, online resources, or experts for help with identification. Additionally, observing its behavior and habitat can provide clues about the species of snail you have.
An Aquatic Snail is an Decomposer
decomposer
decomposer
decomposer
A snail that lives in water.
No, they aren't; apple snails are gasteropodmolluscs.
its a decomposer but it can also be a herbavore
A snail is primarily considered a consumer, as it feeds on plant material, fungi, and decaying organic matter. Snails play a role in the ecosystem by breaking down and recycling nutrients, but they do not produce their own food like a producer (e.g., plants) or primarily decompose organic matter like decomposers (e.g., fungi and bacteria). Some snails, particularly detritivores, can have decomposer-like roles, but their main classification is as consumers.
a consumer. producers are only plants. but if you said a sea snail.... it would be the same
The proper name for a water snail is an aquatic snail.
Yes, snail kites are considered secondary consumers in their ecosystem. They primarily feed on apple snails, which are primary consumers that graze on aquatic plants. By preying on these snails, snail kites occupy a higher trophic level, making them secondary consumers in the food chain.
yes.yes it is and a snail is a herbivore!