No, mussels are filter feeders that consume plankton and organic matter suspended in water. They are not decomposers, which primarily break down dead organisms.
Freshwater mussels live in freshwater habitats like rivers and lakes, while saltwater mussels live in saltwater habitats like oceans and seas. Freshwater mussels tend to be smaller in size compared to saltwater mussels, and they have different behaviors and ecological roles in their respective ecosystems.
A group of mussels is called a bed or a colony. Mussels often form dense clusters on rocks or in the sand along the shore.
No, mussels are not crustaceans. Mussels belong to the phylum Mollusca, while crustaceans belong to the phylum Arthropoda. Mussels are bivalve mollusks, characterized by two hinged shells and a soft body inside, whereas crustaceans have a hard exoskeleton and segmented bodies.
Mussels are aquatic animals that live in both freshwater and saltwater environments. They can be found in rivers, lakes, and oceans around the world, typically in shallow waters where they can attach themselves to rocks or other surfaces.
No, mussels are filter feeders that consume plankton and organic matter suspended in water. They are not decomposers, which primarily break down dead organisms.
Mussels are shellfish, not rabbits. I would suggest not feeding mussels leaves.
Zebra mussels have stripes.
Freshwater mussels live in freshwater habitats like rivers and lakes, while saltwater mussels live in saltwater habitats like oceans and seas. Freshwater mussels tend to be smaller in size compared to saltwater mussels, and they have different behaviors and ecological roles in their respective ecosystems.
Bears can inhale freshwater mussels when they want.
The collective noun is a bed of mussels.
G. Thomas Watters has written: 'A guide to the freshwater mussels of Ohio' -- subject(s): Freshwater mussels, Identification, Mussels 'The freshwater mussels of Ohio' -- subject(s): Identification, Margaritiferidae, Freshwater mussels, Unionidae
No, mussels have no brain, as with all bivalves.
Zebra mussels belong to the family Dreissenidae. These are freshwater bivalve mollusks. Despite their name, zebra mussels are not true mussels.
Mussels and chips in French is "moules et frites."
Sometimes the mussels predetor could make the mussel species drop down
14 miniature mussels form the stinger another 3 mussels control the rectum of the Bee from which the other mussels leave. So a total of 29 mussels