Final answer:
A saltwater organism placed in freshwater will likely perish due to excessive water absorption by osmosis, which can dilute cell solutes and cause the cell to burst. Separately, for a hypothesis to be considered scientific, it must be testable, allowing for potential support or contradiction through experimental and observational methods.
Step-by-step explanation:
Osmotic Pressure and Cell Survival
When a single-celled saltwater organism is placed in freshwater, it experiences a stress on its osmotic balance. The correct statement explaining why such an organism will not survive is A. The organism's cell will absorb too much water through osmosis. Osmosis is the movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane, from a region of low solute concentration to one of high solute concentration.
This influx of water can dilute cell solutes, impairing cell function, and can cause the cell to swell and potentially burst if not managed by some form of cellular regulation such as a rigid cell wall or a contractile vacuole, as seen in some freshwater organisms. However, most saltwater organisms lack these mechanisms and, therefore, do not survive in lower-salinity environments such as fresh water.
With respect to the nature of a scientific hypothesis, the essential characteristic of any hypothesis is that it must be testable (Answer A). A hypothesis requires a framework that allows for experimentation and observation to support or refute the proposed explanation. While peer review, approval by professionals, and research are parts of the scientific process, they do not determine the fundamental nature of a hypothesis.