Obviously seawater plants, but also a group of plants called Halophytes, they have adopted mechanisms that enable them to process salt and are still able to absorb the water from it. These include such plants as Mangroves
Anything and everything from large whales, to the tinniest micro algae grow in the ocean. The smallest organism that grows in the ocean is a species known as nanobes, measuring only 20 microns.
if you could be more specific I would be more than happy to better answer your question, an over all basic list would be mammals, fish, coral, plants, macro algae, micro algae, pods, and micro organisms.
Some plants can't live in salt water such as marsh samphire, Neanthe Bella Neanthe Bella
only plants not native to salt water will die in salt water.
Most plants not native to salt water die in salt water.
how this helped! =)
Mangroves
saltgrasses
yes
Sugar water has some of the nutrients that is important in a plants life cycle. On the other hand, salt water, actually slowly kills the plant, therefore it has no nutrients that the plant absorbs and needs for a healthy lifestyle. But overall, tap water or filtered water are very good for a plant!
Halophytes are plants that thrive in salt water. They can do this by salt tolerance, or salt avoidance. For example, reproducing during periods (like a rainy season) when the salt concentration is low. Or, a plant may maintain a 'normal' internal salt concentration by excreting excess salt through its leaves or by concentrating salt in leaves that later die and drop off. source: wikipedia.com (search Halophytes)
It cannot because it's a type of plant that can only live in salt water. If it lives in the lake, it will die.
If you give plants that are adapted to living on land water that is very salty, it will reverse the osmotic potential in their roots and actually cause water to be removed from the cells of the plant and make them shrivel up, thus leading the plant to experience drought stress even if the soil is moist. A similar process is what causes cucumbers to turn into pickles when they are soaked in brine and vinegar.There are however, plants that are adapted to salty soil and saltwater. These plants have much more effective water intake systems that can overcome this reversal in osmotic potential provided that the salt concentration in the water isn't too high. Seaweed, for example, has a very high salt tolerance. Plants such as Alkali Sacaton and Russian Thistle have a somewhat lower salt tolerance than seaweed, but a higher one than your typical ornamental plant that you may have at home.
yes it does because salt is of course it is too sour and it effects its stem and the roots but there are plants that are used to salt.
They Die.
Normally there are more solvents in the water inside the plant. Water flows in, but salt water has lots of solvents (the salt) so the water flows back out. So eventually, plants die from dehydration. They won't die right after they move to salt water. But they will they after several days.
too much salt in the water inhibits the plants ability to draw water from the soil and eventually it will die of thirst
because if the salt gets into the soil the plants will die from the salt water being poisonous.
Most plants would die in salt water.
plants prefuir rain water the most but they will have tap water if that's all you have do NOT use salt water on plants they just die
It needs to be a plant that naturally grows in salt water. Other plants are not adapted to salt water and will die.
Plants that have not edapted to growing in salt water will die if this is the only water they are given. Tap water is generally safe to grow plants in. In two weeks, if you were to water two identical plants, one with salt water, and one with tap water, the tap water plant would continue to grow, while the salt water plant would die.
Fresh water plants cannot absorb water from salt water, and will normally die quickly in it.
They don't die because they don't even grow.
It will most likely die. Only water plants with fresh water.
It will most likely die. Only water plants with fresh water.