There is a great plant reference guide on floridayards.org. You can search for shrubs based on their salt tolerance level.
Grass is not normally a salt tolerant plant.
A Sago Palm is salt tolerant. Some other salt tolerant palms include cabbage palm, Canary Island palm, and the Chinese fan palm.
chaparral Definition of Chaparral: a dense growth of shrubs or small trees your welcome, JC
Mangroves are medium-height trees and shrubs in the subtropics and tropics. A sentence using this terms is: "They got caught in some mangroves while searching through the swamps."
Spinifex grass is salt tolerant, it's leaves curl to reduce water loss and it has root runners.
A salt marsh is an environment in the upper coastal intertidal zone between land and salty or brackish water, dominated by dense stands of halophytic (salt-tolerant) plants such as herbs, grasses, or low shrubs while Barrier islands are a coastal landform and a type of barrier system, and are relatively narrow strips of sand that parallel the mainland coast.
Yes. Some plants can only live in salt water, like kelp. Others are adapted to estruaries and marshes where the water is somewhat salty, and others can tolerate some salt in the soil, while others can not tolerate any. If you water a non-tolerant plant with salt water you will stunt it's growth, or it might even kill it.
I think the term you want is "sporadic salt-tolerant fresh-water fish."There are 6 classifications of salt-tolerant fresh-water fish all based on time and habits those fish spend in salt water.* Primary Fresh water only* Secondary Fresh water, with short term salt tolerance* Vicarious Saltwater only* Complementary A Diadromous that only takes over fresh water habitat in the absence of primary and secondary fish* Diadromous Migratory fish that live in different types of water at different stages of life* Sporadic Lives and breeds in either type of water typically without migration
Chaparral ecosystems. These environments are typically found in regions with Mediterranean climates, characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters. Chaparral vegetation is well adapted to these conditions, with drought-resistant and fire-tolerant plants like evergreen spiny shrubs dominating the landscape.
Mangroves
Most plants will die if the salinity level is high enough, and pure sea water is too salty for all except those which naturally grow in or at the edge of the sea. Those that originated in a coastal location will be more tolerant than others. In general, herbs with gray foliage tolerate more salt. Basil, parsley and marjorum are more sensitive than dill and coriander. Rosemary and lemongrass are quite salt-tolerant. So, it depends on how salty the water is.
Yes, salt kills the grass in most yards. There are some salt-tolerant grasses but they are not common.