To survive, otters need clean water in a relatively special, undisturbed environment.
That, and their small numbers over a large area, made them very vulnerable to pollution, habitat destruction and historic unregulated fishing. Unlike most people, sea otters like to cool their feet. In fact, their ice consumption is so high that Den Blå Planet has decorated the otter's enclosure with its own ice machine, so they always have a cold treat close at hand.
From the Vancouver Aquarium: Sea otters usually catch hard-shelled food - clams, abalone, clams, crabs... If they are too hard to break with their teeth, they crush them with a rock or against a rock. This is what this sea otter (Elfin) does when it hits the ice on a rock.
Learn about otters:
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Answer+ <span>are concentrated along the central coasts of both nations.</span>
There's actually an entire documentary made about this certain fish, its name is Parrot Fish.
The reason for its name is because it has a beak, which it uses to bite and eat through coral.
And at the end of the day, when the fishes poop, it turns into sand.
For example, one 2010 study in Marine Biology found that large parrotfish in Hawaii can churn out 840 pounds of eroded coral—i.e. white sand—per year. A single giant humphead parrotfish can produce 11,000 pounds of sand per year.
hope this helps!