One may think that since water "follows" salt, when you add more salt to your body you would also retain that water. However, you body will try to excrete the salt. The most concentrated your body can make urine is 1200 mOsm/L. If you drink salt water with a higher concentration than this then you body needs to use some of its current water to dilute your urine to this concentration to remove the salt you drank. As a result, you have a net decrease in water within the body, dehydrating you.
However, even at concentrations of less than 1200 mOsm/L, while you will retain fluid, your new ion blood concentration will increase. This pulls water out of the cells via osmosis essentially dehydrating the cells, despite having more fluid in your body.
the salt in the salt water will dehydrate you and you will die.
yes it can
No water at all because the salt will dehydrate you
When you are stranded in the middle of the ocean, do not drink the salt water: it will only dehydrate you more.
Rain will better water plants because salt water has salt which will dehydrate the plant.
Because the salt in the salt water will remove more water from your body than it introduces. In other words, drinking salt water will dehydrate you.
It is unhealthy for humans to drink ocean water. This is because of all the microorganisms in it and the fact that the salt in the ocean will dehydrate the person.
salt water would kill it it would dehydrate it and then it would need more water than usual.
it contains salt which holds water in its grains so it will dehydrate you. also salt is not good for you insides and most likely you would throw up salty water very quickly and therefore dehydrate yourself even more.
yes
Salt will pull the water content from the cells it encounters. This process, called osmosis, is the reason why bottles of pills and other containers that need to stay dry have little packets of silica in them. The silica (like sodium) leeches the water from its environment.
Salt can dehydrate bugs by drawing out water from their bodies, leading to their death. Additionally, salt can disrupt the internal balance of a bug's cells, causing harm to their physiological functions.