Examples of osmoregulators include marine invertebrates such as crabs and lobsters, as well as freshwater fish like trout and salmon. These organisms actively regulate their internal solute concentrations to maintain osmotic balance with their environment.
If you mean Marine Biologist, it's someone who studies marine life (stuff that lives in the sea)
People who study marine biology are known as marine biologists. They specialize in the study of marine organisms, ecosystems, and environments.
Living things that live in seawater.
Marine organisms are living organisms that inhabit the oceans and other saltwater bodies. They encompass a wide range of species, from microscopic plankton to large marine mammals, and play crucial roles in marine ecosystems.
Examples of osmoregulators include marine invertebrates such as crabs and lobsters, as well as freshwater fish like trout and salmon. These organisms actively regulate their internal solute concentrations to maintain osmotic balance with their environment.
The study of marine organisms is called as marine Biology. Hope this helps!
Marine organisms that maintain their internal salt concentration to match their environment are known as osmoconformers, such as jellyfish, sea anemones, and some bivalves. These organisms allow their internal salt concentration to vary with the surrounding seawater to avoid losing excessive water or becoming dehydrated.
osmoconformers
By osmoregulation. Differs by species or type of organism, but they are either osmoconformers or osmoregulators.
An area with a large population of valuable ocean organisms is called a "marine biodiversity hotspot" or a "marine biodiversity hotspot."
The broad flat part of the ocean basins consisting of sand, mud, and the remains of marine organisms is called the continental shelf.
If you mean Marine Biologist, it's someone who studies marine life (stuff that lives in the sea)
People who study marine biology are known as marine biologists. They specialize in the study of marine organisms, ecosystems, and environments.
marine organisms
the answer is phytoplankton or plankton
You might be thinking of marine zoology, which is a branch of marine biology. It (marine zoology) deals with the "critters" or creatures or animals in the marine environment. Certainly at the very "end" of the scale of marine creatures are living things that might be either animal or plant in nature. We usually see the more general term marine biologist in use to define someone who works in this area, and then a specialty under that umbrella.