usually ponds are freshwater, lakes can very rarely be salt water though
Ponds are typically fresh water, but you can also have salt water ponds or brackish (somewhat salty) ponds.
Coral reefs are salt water Ponds are fresh water
Well it depends on the fish. If it is a fresh water fish then it lives in fresh water, salt water fish live in salt water.
Ponds form where rainwater and runoff meet in a depression in the landscape.
Fresh water occurs in rivers, lakes, and ponds, and falls as rain. It is fresh in the sense that it is not salt water (sea water).
Inland ponds (ie, not near the ocean) are normally fresh water, and are formed either by precipitation (rain, snow, etc.) or by underground, or artesian water sources. Large ponds of this type are often called kettle lakes, in that they have no visible source of water supplying them, such as a river or stream. Ponds can also be formed by receding ocean tides and, in this case, will contain salt water. Of course, when the tide rises again, the pond will simply become part of the ocean, so these ponds are not permanent but exist only when the tide is out.
Most of the rivers, lakes, ponds, glaciers are all fresh water sources and seas and oceans are salt water sources.
The fish will die because the pressure of salt water does not accur in freshwater lakes or ponds
Wolves primarily drink fresh water. Salt water is not suitable for their consumption as it can lead to dehydration due to its high salt content. Wolves fulfill their water needs by drinking from ponds, streams, rivers, and other freshwater sources.
fresh water and salt water. salt water would be found in oceans and seas, fresh water would be found in lakes, streams, some rivers, and ponds.
Well dinoflagellates live in either salt water or many live in fresh water like in lakes or ponds.
salt water and fresh water mostly, so ponds and lakes, but a few live in soil