with its face
Cladophora
Elodea lives in pond water, which is a hypotonicenvironment - hypotonic has less dissolved solutes than the elodea cells.yes the answer would be hypotonic.
Set up two identical containers with pond water, algae, and other typical pond life. Place one container in a well-lit area to receive sunlight, and the other in a dark area. Observe and compare the growth and activity of algae, as well as the overall health of the pond life in each container. The container receiving sunlight should show more active growth and healthier pond life, demonstrating the importance of light energy for pond life.
Plants in a pond ecosystem depend on the physical environment for sunlight, which is essential for photosynthesis and their energy source. They also rely on the water in the pond for hydration and nutrient uptake. The composition of the soil or substrate at the bottom of the pond can affect the plant's anchorage and ability to absorb nutrients.
A pond of water will freeze at or below 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit).
Pond Scum - 2014 was released on: USA: 2014
Pond scum consists of algae. Algae is an autotroph, meaning they do not need to eat. Instead, they produce food internally from carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight using photosynthesis.Pond scum is a algae, a plant. It needs sunlight. If you want to not have pond scum, you need to aerate the water. Avoid plant fertilizers as they will just make the pond scum grow faster.
Pond scum is green algae of the phylum chlorophyta of the protista kingdom.
No. Seaweed is actually good for a pond, but pond scum (most of the time) isn't
It cannot move on its own, other than by growing. It is moved by water currents, winds, being disturbed by animals.
Pond scum is composed of algae; it does not eat, it grows by means of photosynthesis.
organisms
Robert Hooke
Classification of natural species is pretty confusing and sometimes arbitrary. The rules originally used have in some cases been shown to overlap and refute themselves. Also, the term pond scum, can be ambiguous. Sometimes cyanobacteria are called pond scum. They belong to the Kingdom Monera. Other times you may have different types of algae called pond scum, those are indeed classified as protists. So I would say that some kinds of pond scum are protists, and some are bacteria.
Yes, a pond pump would be a great way to keep the scum down. The pump basically works similarly to a pool filter, and will clear away dust, debris, and garbage.
uh u drink it, stupid dump
blue-green bacteria