Salt water needs to be much colder than fresh water to freeze because salt melts ice.
no, because if you put saltwater and freshwater in the freezer saltwater will not freeze completely ,because it has salt in it and it will not freeze at the same rate as freshwater that is my answer to this question.
they are both fish?
no
A freshwater fish cannot be with a saltwater fish.It depends on the fish. Guppies are considered "freshwater" but will live happily in SW if properly acclimatized. Mollies are the same way.
It doesn't make a difference weather it is saltwater or freshwater because they will cool at the same rate it is just that when saltwater evaporates it will leave the salt particles behind.
No
Lobsters are saltwater and crayfish (crawdads) are freshwater.
The same as in the ocean
fresh water will! XD Hey, I did an experiment on this for my science project and it was saltwater that boils easier. If you do this experiment you have to do it multiple times to make sure you get the average. It boils faster, because it has more particles which makes it warmer. For example, when we wear sweatpants, we get warm, and when we wear less clothing we take longer to warm up. Just like the particles. More particles= more heat Less particles= less heat
Freshwater and saltwater fish are in the same phylum that we are, and reptiles and amphibians and birds are in; phylum chordata, subphylum craniata, subphylum vertebrata.
Dissolved oxygen levels are lower in saltwater due to the higher salinity, which decreases the solubility of oxygen. Additionally, the solubility of gases decreases as water temperature increases, which can further reduce dissolved oxygen levels in saltwater compared to freshwater.
Saltwater freezes slower than sugar water because the salt in saltwater lowers the freezing point of the water, requiring it to be at a colder temperature to freeze. Sugar does not have the same effect on the freezing point of water.