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Harmful Algal Bloom

All articles tagged with #harmful algal bloom

PACE Opens a Multispectral Window on Earth’s Oceans, Atmosphere and Life
earth-science1 month ago

PACE Opens a Multispectral Window on Earth’s Oceans, Atmosphere and Life

NASA’s PACE satellite uses hyperspectral imaging and polarimeters to monitor Earth’s oceans, atmosphere, and land—tracking dust and wildfire smoke plumes, mapping three-dimensional cloud structure, identifying ship-induced cloud effects, and detecting phytoplankton types (including diatoms) and blooms such as cyanobacteria in the Great Lakes and Karenia off Australia. These data help warn water managers, support emergency response, and deepen climate and ocean ecosystem understanding, while Artemis II imagery showcases Earth from space.

Unveiling the Role of Plankton Super Swimmers in the 2020 Red Tide Event
environment2 years ago

Unveiling the Role of Plankton Super Swimmers in the 2020 Red Tide Event

A study led by scientists at UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Jacobs School of Engineering has revealed how the historic red tide event of 2020 off Southern California was fueled by the exceptional swimming ability of a plankton species called Lingulodinium polyedra. These dinoflagellates were able to create an exceptionally dense bloom due to their vertical migration, swimming upward during the day to photosynthesize and downward at night to access nutrients. The study validates a 50-year-old hypothesis and highlights the importance of understanding phytoplankton behavior and changes in the coastal environment to predict and mitigate harmful algal blooms.