yes because the wave wash the plankton on the shore
yes because the wave wash the plankton on the shore
Plankton can impact waves by generating bioluminescence, causing a glowing effect known as "surf illumination." Certain species of plankton, such as dinoflagellates, produce light when disturbed, which can create a sparkling effect in the water as waves crash or boats move through the ocean. This phenomenon is often seen in areas with high concentrations of bioluminescent plankton.
Plankton?
The yeti crab has hairy arms to "grab" floating plankton. The crab waves it arms in a cloud of plankton and the plankton gets stuck in there arms, then the plankton get eaten.
It forms the base of the food pyramid; therefore, it supports the life of almost all other marine animals. Some animals eat the plankton, other animals eat those animals, and so on. If there were no plankton, the animals would die out.
No
The sound waves affect their sence of directions.
UV rays affect plankton the most. They make them die.
The size of the ball on the plunger does not affect the amplitude of the waves. The amplitude of the waves is determined by the energy put into creating the waves and the properties of the medium through which the waves travel. The size of the ball may affect other characteristics of the waves, such as frequency or wavelength, but not the amplitude.
electromagnetic waves can affect electric equipment
It kills them. Plankton are myriad different sea creatures. They all die. Some bacteria can actually ingest oil, though.
Seismic waves affect us because they are what causes the motion from an earthquake that destroy buildings and such. The three types of seismic waves are surface waves primary waves also called P-waves and secondary waves also called S-waves.