Saltwater has a much lower freezing point (the freezing point is the temperature where something freezes) than fresh water does. The more salt there is in water, the lower is the freezing point.
Pond water is often still because there is no current bringing more water into the pond. A pond that relies on rain water will be still most of the time. A pond that is spring fed might have a small current.
Nitrate is the N in the NPK of fertilizer. Algae is a plant just as grass is. So just as you add fertilizer to get your lawn to grow, an increase of nitrate in a pond will increase the aglal population. (This is the simple answer. Other variables may be what/how many "higher plants" are already in the pond, what is the temperature of the water, and how much sunlight the pond gets. Understand that all the conditions must be there for the algae to grow -- not just the availability of food.) www.rosepond.com
Under examination, pond water is full of microbes. Bacteria is found in large numbers, as are protozoa and algae.
You can find bluegill in fresh water. Prolly in a lake or large pond. I fish next to bridge pillars if I go for bluegill. They love wax worms..
Although pond water can contain fresh water, some ponds also contain brackish or salt water.
Nope.
Walden Pond Press was created in 2008.
Walden Pond in Massachusetts has an area of approximately 61 acres.
walden pond opens at 7:00 am every morning
"Walden Pond"
Walden Pond is 61 acres. It is the lake that Thoreau made famous
Please rephrase - the question is unclear.
A pond, being fresh water and smaller, would freeze first. Sea water, being salty and larger, also constantly affected by the tides and wind, will only freeze in very extreme coldness.
You would have to be in Massachusetts to visit Walden Pond, which is located in Concord.
Ralph Waldo Emerson was not the author of "Walden Pond." "Walden" was written by Henry David Thoreau, a friend of Emerson. Thoreau wrote about his experiences living in a cabin near Walden Pond in Massachusetts. Emerson was a mentor and close friend of Thoreau and visited him often during his time at Walden Pond.
Mostly fresh water.