One possibility would be - the Kingfisher.
A freshwater fish is a fish that lives in rivers, lakes, ponds, or streams. In other words, a fish that lives in water that has no salt in it.
You can find them under rocks, streams, and ponds.
Its a little fresh-water fish the size of your pinkie. It has three very sharp spikes on its back instead of a dorsal fin and it lives in the lakes and swamps of British Columbia.
Definitely not a hagfish. They live at the deepest depths of saltwater oceans. Not in rivers
It lives in America & Canada. They make tree houses near ponds, lakes, & rivers.
kingfisher
king fisher
Rivers and streams are the genesis of life in an ecosystem. Without these rivers and streams, the chain of life cannot be extended. All human and animal life and their derivatives depend on these bodies of water.
Dragon flies hang around ponds, rivers, and streams because that where they catch their food.
A freshwater fish is a fish that lives in rivers, lakes, ponds, or streams. In other words, a fish that lives in water that has no salt in it.
A carnivore that lives in a river or near a river is a crocodile.
A Bass lives in any freshwater area (such as streams, lakes, rivers, etc.) It is not a salt-water fish
king
Small birds are called kingfishers and i have seen others that are the brown pelican etc depending on where you live....others are typical seagulls
The Platypus lives in and near streams and rivers. in the highlands of Tasmania, the Australian Alps, Queensland's rainforests and as far north of the region, as Cape York Peninsula.
reshwater ecosystems are anything from ponds and lakes to rivers and streams. Anything that lives in/around fresh water sources. Even swamps are considered fresh water ecosystems.
You can find them under rocks, streams, and ponds.