They make a little campfire at the bottom of the ocean, they wear wooly heats and they keep very close together. That what they do. And they sing. I think
2006-10-19 05:27:19
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answer #1
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answered by Ingrid 7 2
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A lot of fish hibernate in the winter at the very depths of lakes and oceans. Something called the winter turnover occurs in which the warmer water from the top of the lake goes down and the colder water from the bottom
2016-03-17 05:08:06
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Fish can and sometimes do freeze, but that is often not fatal. Some are like frogs and salamanders and burrow in the mud and hibernate. Usually, though, fish will still have some water to swim around in, like streams and lakes. Ice fishing is a common practice in the northern states where you have to cut a hole in the ice. This does a couple of things, one is adds more air to the water and the other minimizes the fish population trying to get oxygen from the water of a frozen over lake (they slow down in the cold, so their oxygen demands are reduced). In streams and rivers, the fish often migrate down to warmer or swifter waters where the danger of freezing is reduced. In some places, there is a migratory shift, where fish like salmon and sturgeon head to sea and fish like bass and perch fill their habitat from points upstream, then fish like trout fill the intermediate places where the bass and perch had been.
2006-10-19 04:29:33
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answer #3
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answered by Rabbit 7
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Some fish that live in open waters like rivers and oceans swim south for the winter. But many fish live in lakes and ponds that do not connect to other water. When it gets very cold, ice forms on top of their lakes and ponds, but it doesn't freeze down to the bottom of the lake. The fish live under the ice, which is why some people go ice fishing in the winter. But most fish slow down their heart rates and eat very little, much like bears in hibernation, so they're also harder to catch!
2006-10-19 04:19:23
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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to answer your question, no fish dont freeze up, like cryogenics. In the winter , fish just slow down, its colder so they arent moving that fast, sometime you have, a chance go rent a ice hut, you will see what Im saying, you see them threw the holes, moving slow. An mostly the fish caught in winter, can be caught, in shallow water 5 ft to, deep water 30 ft, do to the water being warmer closes to the ice.
2006-10-19 10:10:22
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answer #5
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answered by ca 1
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Well there is normally a pocket of water and that is where they will stay . I know that my granparents have a small fish pond, Like a bath tub in the ground ( they have Gold Fish in it ) and it will freeze solid and then when the pond thaws out the fish will still be alive. It is crazy.
2006-10-19 04:19:57
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answer #6
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answered by greatestmomntheworld 2
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They sure as hell don't swim south!Fish go to the bottom of what ever their in.When the seasons begin to change the water flips.Cold water comes to the top and the warm water sinks to the bottom.Even in streams and rivers the fish school together in the deepest pools.
2006-10-19 04:29:17
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Fish can freeze into the ice that they are in. It is a slow process so dont try it on any of your pet guppies or anything. Putting them in the freezer and thawing them out to see if it works wont work in case anyone was going to try it. I learned this in college one drunken night. Poor little guy.....
2006-10-19 10:20:31
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answer #8
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answered by theta342002 3
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Most fish go deep into the mud and some go to deeper areas to servive the cold weather.
2006-10-19 08:15:22
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answer #9
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answered by Dan S 1
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The go deeper in the water. It's warmer down below. The aren't very active, but they do swim about.
2006-10-19 08:41:04
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answer #10
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answered by Kindred 5
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