No. They are in fresh water, not salt.
Mexico has 9,330 kilometers (5,780 miles) of coastline, running through the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of California and Pacific Ocean. All of them have salt water. The only "beaches" without salt water are those found on inland lakes, such as the Patzcuaro and Chapala lakes.
Generally, beaches found on oceans and their estuaries will be salt water, and the remainder of the beaches found upstream will be fresh.
It is a rare occurrence but yes alligators have been spotted at beaches.
Along shorelines and near beaches
No. Sam Walton and his family were not members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly called the "Mormon" church). They were Presbyterian. We can assume that Sam Walton knew some Mormons, as he served at Fort Douglas Military Base in Salt Lake City during World War 2.
in the ocean or the sea or beaches like siesta key beach or turtle beach in Florida
Sam Walton joined the military in 1942. He served in the US Army Intelligence Corps supervising security at aircraft plants and prisoner of war camps in the US. He served at Fort Douglas, Salt Lake City, Utah. He reached the rank of captain.
no they cant im afraid unless they were born in tap water. otherwise they can only live in salt water. also, you cannot put salt into water and call that 'salt water' because that is simply dumb.
Salt water accounts for 97.5% of all water on Earth. The oceans, seas and bays are salt water and represent 96.5% of all water on Earth. Another 1% exists as saline ground water. See related links.
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
Salt water