Water leaves the cell, causing the cell to shrink.
water leaves the cell causeing the cell to shrink.
If a freshwater bacterial cell is placed in salt water, water will leave the cell due to the higher concentration of solutes in the surrounding salt water. This process is known as plasmolysis, and it can lead to the bacterial cell shriveling up and potentially dying due to dehydration.
Whatever the organism is it will die a dreadfully painfull death.
yes. they are freshwater fish
Loss of water through osmosis is what would occur. The protozoan would shrivel up if it did not have a way to replace freshwater in its cells.
Water would diffuse into the cells of the jellyfish, causing it to bloat up and possibly burst.
If a saltwater plant were placed in a freshwater aquarium, it would likely not survive due to the differences in salinity levels. Saltwater plants are adapted to living in environments with higher salt concentrations, and placing them in freshwater would disrupt their osmotic balance and lead to dehydration and eventual death.
The bacterial cell will undergo osmotic lysis due to the hypotonic environment created by the distilled water, causing water to enter the cell and potentially burst it. The presence of lysozyme will further damage the bacterial cell by breaking down its cell wall, making it more susceptible to lysis.
Saltwater eggs are given the name for a reason. They will live only in saltwater and will die right after you put them in fresh water.
it will die
it will die
when a vegetable is placed in very salty water, the vegetable becomes soft and collapses. Why does this happen?