Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. 1 day ago · The second central process in the marine food web is the microbial loop. This loop degrades marine bacteria and archaea, remineralises organic and inorganic matter, and then recycles the products either within the pelagic food web or by depositing them as marine sediment on the seafloor. [4]

  2. 4 days ago · Mutualistic interactions between marine phototrophs and associated bacteria are an important strategy for their successful survival in the ocean, but little is known about their metabolic relationships. Here, bacterial communities in the algal sphere (AS) and bulk solution (BS) of nine marine red algal cultures were analyzed, and Roseibium and Phycisphaera were identified significantly more ...

  3. People also ask

  4. 4 days ago · A plant parasite associated with the white haze disease in apples, the Basidiomycota Gjaerumia minor, has been found in most samples of the global bathypelagic ocean. An analysis of environmental ...

  5. 3 days ago · Overview of climatic changes and their effects on the ocean. Regional effects are displayed in italics. This NASA animation conveys Earth's oceanic processes as a driving force among Earth's interrelated systems. There are many effects of climate change on oceans. One of the main ones is an increase in ocean temperatures.

  6. 4 days ago · Current classification. This article largely follows the efforts of the scientific community and the International Society of Protistologists to revise the taxonomy of protists in a manner that reflects their phylogeny and evolution, striving away from the use of historical paraphyletic taxa and relying exclusively on clades as the basis of the classification.

  7. 4 days ago · Frontiers in Marine Science. doi 10.3389/fmars.2024.1381036. 362 views. Part of the fourth most-cited marine and freshwater biology journal, focusing on observations to explore the ocean, reveal new processes or trends, and reduce uncertainties for processes.

  8. 4 days ago · Ocean pollution is widespread and getting worse, and when toxins in the oceans make landfall they imperil the health and well-being of more than 3 billion people, according to a new report by an international coalition of scientists led by Boston College’s Global Observatory on Pollution on Health and the Centre Scientifique de Monaco, supported by the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation.

  1. People also search for