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Some abundant in plankton and others parasitic on fish
Answer for the clue "Some abundant in plankton and others parasitic on fish ", 7 letters:
copepod
Alternative clues for the word copepod
Word definitions for copepod in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Copepod \Cop"e*pod\, a. (Zo["o]l.) Of or pertaining to the Copepoda. -- n. One of the Copepoda. [1913 Webster] ||
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Copepods (; meaning "oar-feet") are a group of small crustaceans found in the sea and nearly every freshwater habitat . Some species are planktonic (drifting in sea waters), some are benthic (living on the ocean floor), and some continental species may ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. Any of very many small crustaceans, of the subclass ''Copepoda'', that are widely distributed and ecologically important; they include the water fleas
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. minute marine or fresh-water crustaceans usually having six pairs of limbs on the thorax; some abundant in plankton and others parasitic on fish [syn: copepod crustacean ]
Usage examples of copepod.
Fourteen species of autotrophic nannoflagellates, twenty heterotrophic flagellates, forty heterotrophic dinoflagellates, and several metazoans, including polychaetes, amphipods, copepods, euphausids, and fish.
On his table were scattered a litter of amphipods and copepods with specimens of Valella, Ianthina, Physalia, and a hundred other creatures whose smell was by no means as attractive as their appearance.
Fourteen species of autotrophic nannoflagellates, twenty heterotrophic flagellates, forty heterotrophic dinoflagellates, and several metazoans, including polychaetes, amphipods, copepods, euphausids, and fish.
As on other worlds, the ocean swarmed with copepods, salps, annelid worms, sponges, and jellyfish, and with squid, swallowers, sharks and other fishes higher on the food chain.
I thought they were copepods at first, but I guess they were just part of the trip.
He cites the little copepod, which numbers in the trillions in modern seas and clusters in shoals large enough to turn vast areas of the ocean black, and yet our total knowledge of its ancestry is a single specimen found in the body of an ancient fossilized fish.
The copepods feed on the smallest living particles in the ocean, and are eaten by some of the largest, in particular the whale shark and the basking shark and various whales.