The Bay of Bengal is the largest bay in the world. It is an extension or part of the Indian ocean and all oceans are filled with saltwater.
I'm assuming you're talking about osmosis. If osmosis didn't occur, then the saltwater salmon couldn't adapt to freshwater and would suffer from a lack of water and too much salt in the cells, and the freshwater salmon would have too much water and not enough salt in it's cells. The saltwater salmon would shrivel up in freshwater, and the freshwater salmon would burst in saltwater.
Zinc will corrode in vinegar faster than salt water
Some fish are salt tolerant and live in salt water (the sea) e.g. Tuna, Angelfish, lion fish, Ocean Trout, etc. Some fish are adapted to live in fresh water e.g. Brook Trout, Brown Trout, Rainbow Trout, Talapia, Catfish, Guppies, Mollies etc. Some fish can live in both sea water and fresh water e.g Salmon, eels etc.
Reasons:- 1. Copious Rainfall. 2. More rivers drain into Bay of Bengal which tends to decrease the salinity by 3-7 PSU.
It would necessarily be sedimentary rock, formed in a saltwater or freshwater environment, depending on the type of clam.
The Bay of Bengal is the largest bay in the world. It is an extension or part of the Indian ocean and all oceans are filled with saltwater.
salt
A bay is a body of water bordered on 3 sides by land, and by definition the "4th side" is the ocean. Whether it is saltwater or freshwater will depend on where the water is from. If the bay is of an ocean, it will be of saltwater. If it is of a freshwater lake or river, it will be of freshwater.
James bay as well as Hudson's bay are both salty, but not quite as salty as The Atlantic or Pacific Oceans.
They contain saltwater and freshwater
they are both saltwater and freshwater
saltwater freshwater saltwater freshwater
The Persian Gulf is saltwater, not freshwater.
freshwater
Freshwater
Freshwater.
Most lakes contain freshwater. From this fact, I'm assuming it is made out of freshwater, rather than saltwater.