oyster
No, oysters have hard shells to protect their soft bodies inside. Their soft bodies typically consist of organs and a muscular foot that helps them anchor to surfaces or move around.
An oyster has a soft body enclosed in two hard shells, connected by a hinge joint. Its body consists of a muscular foot, gills for respiration and feeding, a stomach, and a simple nervous system. Oysters lack a head or distinct body segments.
Ground oyster shells will make soft water harder. Therefore, it will make hard water, harder.
most likely its shell
Give them grit and crushed oyster shells or, from personal experience, I have found that cleaned, crushed eggshells will also work a treat. The grit and oyster shells must be specialist chicken ones.
Soft-shelled eggs indicate a lack of calcium in the hen's diet. Feed more oyster shell or finely-crushed, dry eggshells.
Any of numerous chiefly marine invertebrates of the phylum Mollusca, typically having a soft unsegmented body, a mantle, and a protective calcareous shell and including the edible shellfish and the snails.
It's body is not soft, it has an exo-skeleton
A mollusk is a shelled sea creature that has a muscle in the inside like a clam or oyster. The name comes from its soft inside.
The oyster borer is adapted to bore through the hard shell of oysters using its specialized shell-crushing radula. It secretes an acid to soften the shell and has a muscular foot that helps it bore into the oyster. The oyster borer also has a tube-like body shape that allows it to navigate within the oyster shell.
No, an oyster is not a cnidarian. Cnidarians are a phylum of marine animals that include jellyfish and corals, while oysters are mollusks belonging to the phylum Mollusca.