enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Marine biogenic calcification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_biogenic_calcification

    This process is a fundamental aspect of the life cycle of some marine organisms, including corals, mollusks, foraminifera, certain types of plankton, and other calcifying marine invertebrates. The resulting structures, such as shells , skeletons, and coral reefs, function as protection, support, and shelter and create some of the most ...

  3. Littoraria irrorata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Littoraria_irrorata

    This makes it difficult for predators to remove them from their shell. This is an essential function to have as blue crabs are commonly seen chipping away at the shell ridge in order to feed on the snail. [5] Another method L. irrorata uses to avoid predation is vertical climbing of the grass S. alterniflorus. The snails climb up the grass ...

  4. Cockle (bivalve) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockle_(bivalve)

    Behaviorally, cockles live buried in sediment, whereas scallops either are free-living and will swim into the water column to avoid a predator, or in some cases live attached by a byssus to a substrate. The mantle has three apertures (inhalant, exhalant, and pedal) for siphoning water and for the foot to protrude.

  5. Zooplankton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zooplankton

    Body size is sensitive to changes in temperature due to the thermal dependence of physiological processes. [15] The plankton is mainly composed of ectotherms which are organisms that do not generate sufficient metabolic heat to elevate their body temperature, so their metabolic processes depends on external temperature. [ 16 ]

  6. Common periwinkle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_periwinkle

    Raising the common periwinkle has not been a focus due to its abundance in nature and relatively low price; however, there are potential benefits from aquaculture of this species, including a more controlled environment, easier harvesting, less damages from predators, as well as saving the natural population from commercial harvesting.

  7. Diel vertical migration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diel_vertical_migration

    Species that are better able to avoid predators also tend to migrate before those with poorer swimming capabilities. Squid are a primary prey for Risso's dolphins (Grampus griseus), an air-breathing predator, but one that relies on acoustic rather than visual information to hunt. Squid delay their migration pattern by about 40 minutes when ...

  8. Marine food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_food_web

    The linkages between predator to prey are coloured according to predator group origin, and loops indicate within-group feeding. The thickness of the lines or edges connecting food web components is scaled to the log of the number of unique ROV feeding observations across the years 1991–2016 between the two groups of animals.

  9. Marine larval ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_larval_ecology

    Estuarine invertebrate larvae avoid predators by developing in the open ocean, where there are fewer predators. This is done using reverse tidal vertical migrations. Larvae use tidal cycles and estuarine flow regimes to aid their departure to the ocean, a process that is well-studied in many estuarine crab species.