What is the dope on this? Are there more diverse creatures on land ( man, all types of vertebrates, invertebrates, birds, plants, trees etc etc) or in the sea (fishes, vertebrates, in vertebrates, plants etc etc)
Not in total numbers but variety (genus,species etc).
What’s interesting is that while the total animal species diversity is quite landwards skewed, it isn’t that way for chordates or molluscs, where it’s about a 50/50 split. Arthropods greatly skew the picture, and that’s down to the insects. Which is understandable if you consider ocean continuity vs the possibility for island effects in terrestrial habitats. Also the greater energy budget for terrestrial life.
My understanding is that there is only a 2 billion year window for life to exist on land. The window opened about a billion years ago, and will close about a billion years from now. It has something to do with the sun, but I forget what.
Consider that life is 4 billion years old, and that the first land based life probably happened about 500 million years ago, water based life has a major head start.
You also have to consider that the vast majority of life on earth consists of single celled organisms. We are only beginning to be able to determine the genetic diversity of single celled life. A ml of water has something like several hundred million bacteriophages, viruses, bacteria, etc. so there is going to be a lot of biodiversity in there. Far larger than you will find among multi-cellular life.