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  2. Krill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krill

    Krill is a rich source of protein and omega-3 fatty acids which are under development in the early 21st century as human food, dietary supplements as oil capsules, livestock food, and pet food. [ 77 ] [ 79 ] [ 84 ] Krill tastes salty with a somewhat stronger fish flavor than shrimp.

  3. Marine food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_food_web

    A food web model is a network of food chains. Each food chain starts with a primary producer or autotroph, an organism, such as an alga or a plant, which is able to manufacture its own food. Next in the chain is an organism that feeds on the primary producer, and the chain continues in this way as a string of successive predators.

  4. Forage fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forage_fish

    The position that a fish occupies in a food web is called its trophic level (Greek trophē = food). The organisms it eats are at a lower trophic level, and the organisms that eat it are at a higher trophic level. Forage fish occupy middle levels in the food web, serving as a dominant prey to higher level fish, seabirds and mammals.

  5. Crustacean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crustacean

    Krill and copepods are not as widely fished, but may be the animals with the greatest biomass on the planet, and form a vital part of the food chain. The scientific study of crustaceans is known as carcinology (alternatively, malacostracology , crustaceology or crustalogy ), and a scientist who works in carcinology is a carcinologist .

  6. “History Cool Kids”: 91 Interesting Pictures From The Past

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/history-cool-kids-91...

    They eat 4 to 6 tons of krill a day. As an adult, they can grow up to a 110 ft (33 m) and weigh up to 180 tons. ... chains and rocks. The group managed to escape to Montgomery where Lewis was hit ...

  7. Seafood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seafood

    Like shrimp, they are an important part of the marine food chain, converting phytoplankton into a form larger animals can consume. Each year, larger animals eat half the estimated biomass of krill (about 600 million tonnes). [21] Humans consume krill in Japan and Russia, but most of the krill harvest is used to make fish feed and

  8. Food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_web

    The mean chain length of an entire web is the arithmetic average of the lengths of all chains in a food web. [42] [14] In a simple predator-prey example, a deer is one step removed from the plants it eats (chain length = 1) and a wolf that eats the deer is two steps removed from the plants (chain length = 2).

  9. Planktivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planktivore

    A planktivore is an aquatic organism that feeds on planktonic food, including zooplankton and phytoplankton. [1] [2] Planktivorous organisms encompass a range of some of the planet's smallest to largest multicellular animals in both the present day and in the past billion years; basking sharks and copepods are just two examples of giant and microscopic organisms that feed upon plankton.