Researchers have discovered a special strain of marine cyanobacteria that consume and store carbon dioxide at a rapid rate.
Three years ago, María del Carmen Muñoz, a researcher at the University of Cordoba, was peering into an electron microscope to study the vesicles of marine cyanobacteria and found, almost ...
Credit: Wyss Institute at Harvard University Researchers have discovered a special strain of marine cyanobacteria that consume and store carbon dioxide at a rapid rate. With a unique density that ...
Chonkus, a mutant strain of cyanobacteria seen here in a microscopy image, contains large white spots that appear to be carbon-dense granules. Those granules may explain why the cyanobacterium grows ...
An international team of scientists (including experts from Harvard University) have described a carbon dioxide-hungry algae ...
Scientists have discovered Chonkus, a cyanobacteria strain that grows rapidly in CO2-rich water, offering potential climate solutions.
Toxic cyanobacteria in water ... Spreading dead zones and consequences for marine ecosystems. Science 321, 926-929 (2008). Morris, J. G. Harmful algal blooms: an emerging public health problem ...
Extreme blooms of certain species can be harmful to marine animals... Blooms of cyanobacteria develop in the brackish waters of Nevada's Lake Pyramid. Floating, plant-like organisms reproduce ...
These familiar marine arthropods first arose about 545 ... mineral structures formed by the activity of cyanobacteria. The sponges added to these reef habitats by building supporting skeletons ...