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It cannot because the plants that live in the ocean can only live in salt water. If it lives in the lake, it will die. They can grow in the Caspian Sea (and other salt water lakes), since they have the same water content as an ocean.
The lake will have heaps of plants and algae. they will then start dying and the "bodies" will rot which is a process that consumes oxygen, if too much organic mass rots it consumes all the oxygen in the water and everything in the lake dies- this process is called eutrification
YES
A lake's water is deeper than six feet, so no plants can grow at the bottom of the deepest parts. So, you can have a really large pond or a really small lake. It all depends on depth, which also influences temperature. Ponds are more stable; lakes will layer (or stratify). The plants influence dissolved oxygen, which varies in ponds and is more stable in lakes. http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/general/columns/story?columnist=wilson_taylor&page=g_col_Wilson_lake_or_pond_the_answers
Lake Mead is very very saline and only some blue green alga can live in it.
littoral
littoral
The littoral zone
The littoral zone
The littoral zone of a lake is the near the shore area where sunlight penetrates all the way to the sediment and allows aquatic plants to grow. The benthic zone is the region at the lowest level of a body of a lake including the sediment surface and some sub-surface layers.
plant life is not able to grow on the shores of the lake.
Littoral
On the shoreline in vegetated areas as well as the shallows when they are looking for food. The best areas are any channels on the lake.
Littoral
littoral zone,pelagic zone and benthic zone
Littoral
Littoral