| 11. | The opposite of euryhaline organisms are stenohaline ones, which can only survive within a narrow range of salinities.
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| 12. | However, some members of this subfamily are among the rare euryhaline polychaetes, inhabiting brackish and freshwater habitat.
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| 13. | Most are euryhaline and often found in brackish water, but the genus also includes species restricted to marine or fresh water.
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| 14. | Fishes that spend time in estuaries ( or river mouths ) need to be euryhaline ( tolerant to a range of salinities ).
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| 15. | It is a widespread marine phytoplankton and can function at a wide range of temperatures ( eurythermal ) and salinities ( euryhaline ).
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| 16. | On the other hand, some osmoconformers are classified as euryhaline, which means they can survive in a broad range of external osmolarities.
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| 17. | An example of a euryhaline species is the bull shark, which lives in Lake Nicaragua of Central America and the Zambezi River of Africa.
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| 18. | Because it is a euryhaline fish, living in marine, brackish, and freshwater habitats, it can be farmed in a wide range of salinities.
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| 19. | The juveniles are euryhaline, or tolerant to a wide range of salinity, so these embayments may be low-salinity estuaries or hyper-saline lagoons.
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| 20. | It is eurythermal, tolerating a wide range of temperatures, from 1.6 to 32.2 �C . It is also euryhaline, living at ppt.
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