they are pools created by the tide... shocking
the water left over after a tide
never the tidepools are shy and only come up when they are by themselves!!!!
In all salt water tidepools and oceans from Alaska to California down to Baja.
For land hermit crabs: Tropical or sub-tropical beaches/jungles. For marine hermit crabs: Oceas, seas, tidepools, beaches of all latitudes.
Fish live in a variety of habitats, and like to be in whatever habitat they are adapted to. These habitats include shallow ponds, lakes, rivers, shoreline, tidepools, deep ocean, midwater, reefs, etc.
The habitat is usually on a rock or under a rock like coral They usally burry them self under mud
you have to go to that broken bridge, and break out ur f space thingy, the on top of the tower you move som bricks so u can make a stair case then u use ur techno tool to pick the lock at the fence.
Laura I. Shaw has written: 'Design of a field trip introduction to tidepools using videotape' -- subject(s): Audio-visual aids, School field trips, Tide pool ecology, Video tapes in education, Production and direction, Video recordings, Study and teaching
Mostly carnivores and omnivores because not that many animals eat seaweed and there isn't that much vegetation in the tidepools. (ps:there are many spelling errors in the question. The correct question would be,"What type of animal lives in a tidepool, carnivores, herbivores, or omnivores.")
yes!!! we were in Kauai on Poipu Beach area and i was bitten several times even with repellant! My husband was bit dozens of times on his feet and ankles while dining at the Tidepools Restaurant at the Hyatt!! So do go prepared with repellant when visiting this very moist and humid island. It did not however prevent us from enjoying this gorgeous island!
Sea anemones are found in almost all marine ecosystems in all oceans, from tidepools to the abyssal plains. Because only a very few sea anemone species are capable of swimming, and even then only due to attack by nudibranch, crab or seastar, very few sea anemones are found in the open ocean. Those that are live attached to some surface, like driftwood, seaweed, or the hulls of ships.
Michael Rigsby has written: 'A quick field guide to tidepools of the Pacific coast' -- subject(s): Tide pool plants, Coastal ecology, Tide pools, Guidebooks, Habitat, Tide pool animals, Tide pool ecology 'Mating games' -- subject(s): Aquatic animals, Behavior, Reproduction, Sexual behavior in animals 'Monterey Bay Aquarium' -- subject(s): Marine animals, Monterey Bay Aquarium
We have been watching a jellyfish that has been out of the water for apprx. 6 hours, and it is still breathing/flexing and clearly still alive. The tide is now coming back and we'll see if it can still swim and function normally......