A swamp is a landform
yes, a pond is a fresh water ecosytem. Although the ecosystem is in the same biom as many other small ecosystem, the ecosystem contains many small communitys. The pond is a freshwater ecosystem because it contains small communitys that interect with each other and because its a fresh water source.
ecosystems limiting factors include the temperature of the water, sunlight, the amount of nutrients, and dissolved oxygen content, which is the amount of oxygen gas dissolved in a given volume of water at a particular temperature and pressure. The salinity can also be a limiting factor in aquatic ecosystems. This is the amounts of various inorganic minerals or salts dissolved in a given volume of water.
Via the water cycle. Water is evaporated from the sea (and land) and rises in the warm air. At the air rises it cools and the evaporated moisture condenses to form clouds. Eventually the droplets coalesce to form raindrops and fall as rain or snow.
An octopus cannot breathe on land and requires water to survive.
Well, friend, amphibians like frogs and salamanders are quite special creatures. They can live in both land and water! They start their lives in water as tadpoles, then grow into adults that can live on land or in water, adapting to their environment like little nature magicians.
a swamp is a combo of land and water.
Possibly desert.
wetland, marsh, swamp
swamp
A swampis a wetland with some flooding of large areas of land by shallow bodies of water. A swamp generally has a large number of hammocks, or dry-land protrusions, covered by aquatic vegetation, or vegetation that tolerates periodical inundation. The two main types of swamp are "true" or swamp forests and "transitional" or shrub swamps. The water of a swamp may be fresh water, brackish water or seawater.
A swamp is not underground water; it is an area of land that is saturated with water. Swamps can either be freshwater, saltwater, or a combination of both, but they are located on the surface rather than underground.
They can form on either on water or on land, but it is more common for them to form on land. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
No, a swamp is not groundwater. A swamp is an area of land that is wet or spongy in nature due to the accumulation of water, while groundwater refers to water that is stored beneath the ground in soil and rock formations. Swamps may be fed by groundwater but they are not the same thing.
coal.
Tornadoes most often form on land, but they can form over water.
An area or land permanently saturated with water is called a wetland. Wetlands are important ecosystems that support a variety of plant and animal species, as well as provide various ecosystem services such as water filtration and flood control.
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