No. They live in the water, and sometimes wash up on beaches, at which point, they will die.
Seaweed normally clings to rocks by using hold fasts but they can be ripped off by strong waves whipped up high winds. The tide then washes the seaweed inshore and dumps it along the high tide line.
Hawksbill Turtle or Loggerhead Turtle eggs.
maybe because they can not swim against some waves and so they get washed up or they are already dead
How is sea foam created on beaches? It is created when small plankton and other bacterial life forms get pushed together from the ocean waves and wash up on shore as bubbles because of the constant churning.
Beaches are built up during quiet weather and removed rapidly during storms. Most beaches are longer and wider in summer vs winter due to weather conditions. Also, damming rivers can cause beaches to shrink.
It is extracted by warming the seaweed/kelp up.
Yes (or rather, an extract of seaweed).
Beaches form when tiny bits of rock that have been eroded by the action of the waves wash up on shore. They are different because they tend to be composed of different types of sand (rock bits). For example, beaches formed mainly of lava rock will have black sand, while other beaches may be white, pink, or tan.
No. Actually they would die if they were exposed to air to long. But there would proboly be predators there and people so it would die
Sons of Beaches
Look up Susswassertang on wikipedia. Freshwater plant whose name means freshwater seaweed. Yes, I live on a lake and we have A TON of seaweed