The majority are filter feeders and have no head or radula.
It probably lives in burrows and is a filter feeder.
Being in the open current, it is covered with thick growths of filter feeders.
In behavior, they also differ; the great white is an active predator of large animals and not a filter feeder.
It is a filter feeder, and also sweeps food from rocks.
Animals that get food this way are called filter feeders.
It is both a deposit and a filter feeder.
No other mud shrimp is known to be a filter feeder in this way.
All are filter feeders: they lost their radula in the course of evolution.
One very big filter feeder is the manta ray, 18 feet across.