No, plants like seaweed and algae live completely or partly underwater. -A.D.
okay they live in an underground burrow.Some mostly live underwater
All volcanoes have some dangers, of course. Some underwater volcanoes can lead to tsunamis or other forms of water disasters. Land volcanoes spit ouot hot ash and lava and molten rock, and smoke as well, so much so that you could be burned alive by boiling hot ash, choked to death by smoke or gas or burned by lava, or even crushed by falling rock.
Yes, Sharks, Dolphins, and several other carnivores live underwater
Underwater plants get energy through a process called photosynthesis, where they use sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into energy-rich molecules such as glucose. Light penetrates the water surface and reaches the underwater plants, allowing them to carry out this important process.
Your question is much too vague. There are many bioluminescent organisms. People say that as much as 80% or underwater live has some form of bioluminescense.
On land most likely.
Frogs live both underwater and above (on land). They are amphibians.
No. they live underwater. insects live on land.
No, not all snails can live underwater. Some snails are adapted to live in water, while others live on land.
bioluminescent animals live in the deep layer of the ocean. including jellyfish,octopses, and squid.
No way
I'm positive that they can for a short period of time like a few minutes but they can't live underwater they live on the land .
amphibians are creatures that can live in water or on land, that does not mean that if we build a dome underwater and live their that we are amphibians.Amphibians can breathe underwater and on land, and since humans can't breathe underwater without the help of special equipment we are not amphibians.
Bioluminescent organisms are those that produce light. There are bioluminescent bacteria that live in the ocean like those in the genera Vibrio and Photomicrobium.
Most humans on Earth live on land, and many of them own land. Without land, humans would either have to live in underwater habitats or simply would not survive.
No, plants like seaweed and algae live completely or partly underwater. -A.D.