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  2. Cyanobacteria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyanobacteria

    Oxygen concentrations in the atmosphere remained around or below 0.001% of today's level until 2.4 Ga ago (the Great Oxygenation Event). [178] The rise in oxygen may have caused a fall in the concentration of atmospheric methane, and triggered the Huronian glaciation from around 2.4 to 2.1 Ga ago. In this way, cyanobacteria may have killed off ...

  3. Harmful algal bloom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmful_algal_bloom

    Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) bloom on Lake Erie (United States) in 2009. These kinds of algae can cause harmful algal bloom. A harmful algal bloom (HAB), or excessive algae growth, is an algal bloom that causes negative impacts to other organisms by production of natural algae-produced toxins, water deoxygenation, mechanical damage to other organisms, or by other means.

  4. Marine food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_food_web

    The ocean produces about half of the world's oxygen and stores 50 times more carbon dioxide than the atmosphere. [17] Prochlorococcus, an influential bacterium which produces much of the world's oxygen. Among the phytoplankton are members from a phylum of bacteria called cyanobacteria. Marine cyanobacteria include the smallest known ...

  5. Pumping oxygen into deep areas of Lake Hopatcong may solve ...

    www.aol.com/pumping-oxygen-deep-areas-lake...

    The green surface indicates algae growth seen from the Lake Hopatcong Foundation's Floating Classroom. Sept. 19, 2019. "Once the oxygen gets low, the bond breaks and the phosphorus is released ...

  6. Algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algae

    The largest and most complex marine algae are called seaweeds. In contrast, the most complex freshwater forms are the Charophyta, a division of green algae which includes, for example, Spirogyra and stoneworts. Algae that are carried passively by water are plankton, specifically phytoplankton.

  7. Marine primary production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_primary_production

    Most marine primary production is generated by a diverse collection of marine microorganisms called algae and cyanobacteria. Together these form the principal primary producers at the base of the ocean food chain and produce half of the world's oxygen. Marine primary producers underpin almost all marine animal life by generating nearly all of ...

  8. Prochlorococcus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prochlorococcus

    Prochlorococcus is a genus of very small (0.6 μm) marine cyanobacteria with an unusual pigmentation (chlorophyll a2 and b2).These bacteria belong to the photosynthetic picoplankton and are probably the most abundant photosynthetic organism on Earth.

  9. Dinoflagellate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinoflagellate

    Most eukaryotic algae contain on average about 0.54 pg DNA/cell, whereas estimates of dinoflagellate DNA content range from 3–250 pg/cell, [32] corresponding to roughly 3000–215 000 Mb (in comparison, the haploid human genome is 3180 Mb and hexaploid Triticum wheat is 16 000 Mb).