Boomer
Well-known member
Andrew
Boomer one final thing there are wolves in all of the Americas and Africa and Asia
Well, now that everyone is awake on that subject Nice to see some did their unannounced home work assignment on that issue :eek2:
I can tell you salinity is less affected by proximity to land than any other factor, anybody ever heard of salt marshes immense concentrations of salt precipitated by what else evaporation rates
We are talking about the ocean and the salinity of the ocean in relation to land and not salt marshes or estuaries. If you look at any map, like the one I posted of the worlds ocean salinity, it is usually lower by shore. So, it is not less affected by proximity to land but more affected by land. That does not mean there are no shores where land as no bering on salinity, just look at Australia. The asian coast line is the best example where land does affect it, due to all the massive rivers systems. Look at the trend of salinity between the asian and north american coasts. In Noth America, where we are at and what started this debate, almost all North American coast lines have a lower salinity near shore and increases out from shore.
Remember there are now lion fish swimming around in the Florida Keys.
And this is because of what ? HOBBYISTS, dumping their fish. Same reason you now have many Amazon fish ( and others) in Florida lakes.
Paul
Where did you get this from But "Plankton" is a small shrimp
That is not the case. Some plankton are small shrimp but not all plankton are small shrimp
filled with copepods, worms, and many crustacean fry.
This is plankton There is zooplankton and phytoplankton. You are thinking of plankton as in "krill". Look up the word "plankton"
I asked why they were not there.
Again barriers, need and what all seem to have missed.....the big one in zoogeography and evolution......... "by chance" . Paul, not the fish near or around Galapagos Islands but the famous Darwin's Finches was what I was looking for someone to pick up on. The first finch ended up there by chance. And to this day, there has not been a new chance for these birds to end up somewhere else "by chance".
Boomer one final thing there are wolves in all of the Americas and Africa and Asia
Well, now that everyone is awake on that subject Nice to see some did their unannounced home work assignment on that issue :eek2:
I can tell you salinity is less affected by proximity to land than any other factor, anybody ever heard of salt marshes immense concentrations of salt precipitated by what else evaporation rates
We are talking about the ocean and the salinity of the ocean in relation to land and not salt marshes or estuaries. If you look at any map, like the one I posted of the worlds ocean salinity, it is usually lower by shore. So, it is not less affected by proximity to land but more affected by land. That does not mean there are no shores where land as no bering on salinity, just look at Australia. The asian coast line is the best example where land does affect it, due to all the massive rivers systems. Look at the trend of salinity between the asian and north american coasts. In Noth America, where we are at and what started this debate, almost all North American coast lines have a lower salinity near shore and increases out from shore.
Remember there are now lion fish swimming around in the Florida Keys.
And this is because of what ? HOBBYISTS, dumping their fish. Same reason you now have many Amazon fish ( and others) in Florida lakes.
Paul
Where did you get this from But "Plankton" is a small shrimp
That is not the case. Some plankton are small shrimp but not all plankton are small shrimp
filled with copepods, worms, and many crustacean fry.
This is plankton There is zooplankton and phytoplankton. You are thinking of plankton as in "krill". Look up the word "plankton"
I asked why they were not there.
Again barriers, need and what all seem to have missed.....the big one in zoogeography and evolution......... "by chance" . Paul, not the fish near or around Galapagos Islands but the famous Darwin's Finches was what I was looking for someone to pick up on. The first finch ended up there by chance. And to this day, there has not been a new chance for these birds to end up somewhere else "by chance".