what will remove copper sulfate stain in commodes
Seaweeds troop
Seaweeds troop
If you get liquid paraffin in your hair you will need to find a sulfate shampoo to remove it. Organix and Cream of Nature are two brands of sulfate shampoos.
Seaweeds are not plants it is a type of algae
Plants are the ancestors of seaweeds. Convergent evolution caused their similarity. Both evolved from brown algae. Seaweeds are the ancestors of plants. Seaweeds are aquatic plants.
Seaweeds have to deal with propellors, turtles, crustateans, and other nautical paracites.
Asian countries Seaweeds are not grown in countries they are grown in oceans.
Mushrooms are the fruiting bodies of a fungus. Seaweeds are plants that live in the sea.
there are lots of seaweeds ..... some of them are used as food. there are sea lettuce, Ulva sp. or the hairy green seaweed, seagrasses, green seaweeds that look like grapes, and different feathery green seaweeds and feathery green seaweeds and seagrasses, green seaweeds that look like grapes, and different feathery green seaweeds and feathery green seaweeds and seagrasses, brown seaweeds and red seaweeds, Ornate leaf slug (Elysia ornata) and a tiny hairy Bryopsis slug that is still awaiting identification and is often seen on the Hairy green seaweed (Bryopsis sp.) and the tiny Halimeda slug (Pusilla sp.) often seen on Big coin green seaweed (Halimeda sp.)See related link
No , , sea weeds are not included in kingdom Monera but in Kingdon Protista Seaweeds belong to three kingdoms: Kingdom Plantae (chlorophyte, or "green" algae seaweeds), Kingdom Plantae (rhodophyte, or "red" algae seaweeds), Kingdom Chromista (phaeophyte, or "brown" algae seaweeds) Kingdom Chromista (xanthophyte, or "yellow-green" algae seaweeds), and Kingdom Bacteria (cyanophyte, or "blue-green" algae seaweeds).
Sodium sulfate is highly soluble in water, but insoluble in most organic solvents. If you want to increase its solubility in water (as for any salt), you can heat the solution or remove one of the products (sodium ions or sulfate ions) from solution. I can't think of any insoluble sodium salts, but barium sulfate (BaSO4) is insoluble in water. Thus, adding barium chloride (or some other soluble barium salt) will remove sulfate from the equilibrium (due to BaSO4 precipitation) and increase the solubility of sodium sulfate.