eternal
The pond itself.
The pond itself.
Yes, you can fill in a pond with water to create a habitat for aquatic life.
Pond plants include water lilies, duckweed, and cattails adapted for life in water. Animals like frogs, tadpoles, turtles, and various insects such as dragonflies and water beetles are also adapted to pond environments.
they say fuzzy stuff and kick the water
Without vegetation, pond water would be almost pure. A lack of vegetation would cause pond animals to leave and therefore would alter the life systems of the pond. Eventually, algae and reeds would grow in and around the pond, regardless if animals are there or not.
That depends in part on your geography. If you are close to other bodies of water that are inhabited by frogs or toads, you are likely to find tadpoles in your pond. To have tadpoles in your pond, it must either be frequented by frogs or toads or have the eggs transported to the pond in some other way. The presence of tadpoles in a pond also depends on the pond itself. Shallow water on the margins of the pond with good vegetative cover provides favorable conditions for tadpoles. The water quality in the pond must also be conducive to aquatic life for tadpoles to survive.
It is the circle of life itself
Its seed is spongy, thus it is buoyant and floats on water. It usually floats downstream due to the water current, stations itself at somewhere like a pond and germinates.
It walks away or scoots away on the water to get away.
Water is a collection of molecules composed of Hydrogen and Oxygen. A water molecule does not fit the description of a cell (and cells are the fundamental unit of life), hence water is not living. Much of what makes up a living cell is water, but water itself is inanimate.