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No, water does not lose nutrients as it gets warmer. In fact, higher temperatures can sometimes enhance nutrient availability as they can increase the rate of biological and chemical processes that release nutrients into the water. However, excessive warming can also lead to consequences like changes in nutrient cycling and potential deoxygenation.
Yes; plants do need warmth to grow. The warmer it is, the more nutrients a plant can gather.
Heated from the bottom, the warmer substance will slowly rise to the top while the cooler substance at the top falls to the bottom to be heated again. Look at a lava lamp. That is all about convection currents.
Planktonic algae populations typically peak in warmer months when sunlight and nutrients are abundant, promoting their growth. In temperate regions, this peak often occurs in the spring and summer.
Much warmer.
Seasonal turnover, also known as lake mixing, is a process where cooler water sinks and replaces warmer water at the surface of a lake. This brings nutrients from the deeper layers to the surface, refreshing the supply of nutrients throughout the lake.
Bottom, because cold water is denser.
leaves
The warmer fluid at the bottom of the vessel being heated.
a surface current is warmer becasuse it isn't near the bottom of the ocean its near the top so it gets more heat
The fan will physically get warmer and the blade speed will increase.
warmer material will move upward were it cools then fall back to the bottom so it can start the cycle (convection current) once again
No, water does not lose nutrients as it gets warmer. In fact, higher temperatures can sometimes enhance nutrient availability as they can increase the rate of biological and chemical processes that release nutrients into the water. However, excessive warming can also lead to consequences like changes in nutrient cycling and potential deoxygenation.
Yes; plants do need warmth to grow. The warmer it is, the more nutrients a plant can gather.
warmer material will move upward were it cools then fall back to the bottom so it can start the cycle (convection current) once again
The room becomes cooler because warmer air goes out, and cooler air comes in.
Depends on how much warmer, but generally they should have no problem unless the climate change affected their prey supply. They would survive much like anything else. By adapting to the change.