English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

The big storm that recently hit Oregon produced 40 ft. waves on the coast--what do waves that size do to marine life? How do fish, dolphins, whales, etc, survive? Does it mess up the food chain by ripping out sea weed? Or is it pretty easy for sea life to survive because its pretty calm under water regardless of how violent it is at the surface?

2006-12-16 02:47:31 · 3 answers · asked by jxt299 7 in Environment

3 answers

We know in the ocean, coral reefs are the most diverse habitats in the ocean. Coral reefs can be compared to rainforests on land.

Now if big big storm occurs, it can wipe out coral reefs or cause corals to die. And when that happen, many organisms depend on coral and coral reefs to live, they would eventually die too.

This effects the whole ladder of food chains.

2006-12-16 02:59:02 · answer #1 · answered by Dr. Zoo 3 · 0 0

There are not any disadvantages. If it weren't for the greenhouse result, the worlds widely used temperature will be 50 tiers Fahrenheit decrease and we may all be useless. The greenhouse result isn't the earth trapping warmth. that is soaking up warmth from the earth and then sending it decrease back at a diverse wavelength. the basically ability draw back will be if it were given to severe and the earth had some severe heating. yet this can't be reported as a draw back by way of the indisputable fact that is what's holding you alive. it should be like the declaring the draw back of triumphing a one hundred dollar invoice is getting a paper decrease from it.

2016-11-30 20:35:57 · answer #2 · answered by plyler 4 · 0 0

the waves are only a surface phemenius

2006-12-21 08:57:10 · answer #3 · answered by pingouin 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers