NASA | Earth’s Oceans Show Decline In Microscopic Plant Life
The world's oceans have seen significant declines in certain types of microscopic plant-life at the base of the marine food chain, according to a new NASA study. The research is the first to look at global, long-term phytoplankton community trends based on a model driven by NASA satellite data. Diatoms, the largest type of phytoplankton algae, have declined more than 1 percent per year from 1998 to 2012 globally, with significant losses occurring in the North Pacific, North Indian and Equatorial Indian oceans. The reduction in population may have an impact on the amount of carbon dioxide drawn out of the atmosphere and transferred to the deep ocean for long-term storage.
Tags
Comments
Leave a Comment
Comments are loading... If you don't see any, be the first to comment!
Related Videos
Protecting our forests. NSF Science Now 3
Science360
NSF Science Now 3
Science360
Electric Wind of Venus
NASA Goddard
NASA | In The Zone
NASA Goddard
Carbon Capture: Phytoplankton
Imagine Learning - Twig (middle years+)
Turning Astronaut Pee Into Plastic
SciShow Space
Why Pets Have Surprisingly Small Brains
MinuteEarth
NASA | How Sunlight Pushes Asteroids
NASA Goddard
Chinese rocket crashes back to Earth
Next Animation Studio
ScienceCasts: Earth Observation from the Station
Science@NASA
