Answer is The epipelagic zone
They eat microscopic plants and animals called plankton.
Microscopic bacteria break down meat/waste from carnivores; actinolites, dead plants/waste of herbivores; fungi, fruits & vegetables.
An animal, usually. A consumer is an organism that must eat other organisms to obtain its enrgy. Microscopic organisms can also be consumers. Plants and some microscopic organisms are producers, meaning they create their food from sunlight through photosynthesis.
Snakes are neither green like plants which are producers, nor are they microscopic like bacteria nor tiny like maggots so they are not decomposers. That leaves consumers.
herbavores
Tadpoles eat microscopic aquatic "plants" called phytoplankton.
Phytoplankton
No, plankton are microscopic plants and animals. They either make their own food from sunlight or eat other microscopic organisms.
No. They are microscopic plants that float freely in seawater.
It is a living sea creature, specifically plankton consisting of microscopic plants.
"Phytoplankton" refers specifically to microscopic plant-like organisms that live in aquatic environments and photosynthesize to produce energy. "Plankton" is a general term that encompasses a wider range of organisms, including phytoplankton, zooplankton (animal-like organisms), and bacterioplankton (bacterial organisms). Phytoplankton are a subset of plankton.
There are microscopic single cell plants called phytoplankton that live and multiply in water, and mosses, lichens and algae that can live under the snow and ice. No cactus.
Almost all green plants, but especially the cyanobacteria and phytoplankton (microscopic plants) that occur in the oceans.
Plankton are microscopic organisms that live in the ocean. Zooplankton are tiny animals. Phytoplankton are tiny plants. Some examples of phytoplankton include many types of algae, or single-celled plants.
phytoplankton
Microscopic plants. Such plants are like plankton.
microscopic plants