索引于
  • 在线访问环境研究 (OARE)
  • 打开 J 门
  • Genamics 期刊搜索
  • 期刊目录
  • 西马戈
  • 乌尔里希的期刊目录
  • 访问全球在线农业研究 (AGORA)
  • 电子期刊图书馆
  • 国际农业与生物科学中心 (CABI)
  • 参考搜索
  • 研究期刊索引目录 (DRJI)
  • 哈姆达大学
  • 亚利桑那州EBSCO
  • OCLC-WorldCat
  • 学者指导
  • SWB 在线目录
  • 虚拟生物学图书馆 (vifabio)
  • 普布隆斯
  • 米亚尔
  • 大学教育资助委员会
  • 欧洲酒吧
  • 谷歌学术
分享此页面
期刊传单
Flyer image

抽象的

Food and Nutrition in Aquatic Species

Rakshitha Kotha

Food networks depict who eats whom in an environmental local area. Made of interconnected orders of things, food networks assist us with seeing how changes to biological systems - say, eliminating a top hunter or adding supplements - influence various species, both straightforwardly and in a roundabout way. Phytoplankton and green growth structure the foundations of oceanic food networks. They are eaten by essential purchasers like zooplankton, little fish, and scavengers. Essential shoppers are thus eaten by fish, little sharks, corals, and baleen whales. Top sea hunters incorporate enormous sharks, dolphins, toothed whales, and huge seals. People eat amphibian life from each segment of this food web. Food varieties like salmon, lobster, and shrimp, are frequently classified as "fish." But how should you arrange these food sources while including a freshwater fish, like trout? Think about the term amphibian food varieties (likewise called blue food varieties), which incorporate any creatures, plants, and microorganisms that start in waterways.