I know, it is hunters. Their killing mountain lions that eat deer, which mean deer are over populated now.So, their eating and eating so, plants hold dirts with their roots. Once they eat them (deer), the dirt gets into the water (sediment and erosion) and it kills fish. I studied this in class.
There are a variety of ways, including:Slope stabilization - Restoration of landslides and unstable cut slopes can provide significant challenges.Riparian Restoration - Protection of stream bank erosion while establishing and enhancing fish and wildlife habitat.Sediment Control - Sediment control such as coffer dams, turbidity curtains, sediment traps and settling ponds, if designed, constructed, and maintained correctly, can be a significant sediment control attribute to projects.
The lake gets sediment from leaves rotting, dead crustaceans like snails, cray fish ect. dieing and rotting. Sand and rocks from the sides of the waters edge get pulled in from heavy winds and such and get broken down and mixed in as well.
it is bad for them
yes. When calcite minerals erode into water they raise the pH by becoming CO3(-) this makes it hard for some fish to live.
No, ribbonfish and eels are not related. Ribbonfish are deep-sea fish, very strange in appearance, and rarely seen alive (dead specimens are most often found).
deep
Dead Fish was created in 2005.
nothing. A dead fish does not eat.
No but only if they eat poisoned dead fish
no they eat dead fish no they eat dead fish
The duration of Dead Fish is 1.63 hours.
Apart from fish and amphibians, sediment.