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A systematic review to assess current surface water and sediment microplastic sampling practices in seagrass and mangrove ecosystems. [PDF]
Greenshields J+3 more
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2020
After discussing oxygen, we turn to the plankton that forms the basis of the marine food web. There are many different forms of plankton and with large genetic variation, giving plankton great resistance to environmental changes. Plankton provides extraordinary ecosystem services by taking up carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, as well as serving as ...
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After discussing oxygen, we turn to the plankton that forms the basis of the marine food web. There are many different forms of plankton and with large genetic variation, giving plankton great resistance to environmental changes. Plankton provides extraordinary ecosystem services by taking up carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, as well as serving as ...
openaire +2 more sources
The Open Sea–Its Natural History The World of Plankton. By Prof. Alister C. Hardy. (The New Naturalist: a Survey of British Natural History.) Pp. xv + 335 + 48 plates. (London: William Collins, Sons and Co., Ltd., 1956.) 30s. net.
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2009
The microscopic plants and animals of our oceans known as plankton fix 100 million tons of CO2 per day, produce half the oxygen we breathe, support almost all marine life, impact human health through harmful algal blooms, contribute to cloud formation, and help to move carbon into the deep ocean.
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The microscopic plants and animals of our oceans known as plankton fix 100 million tons of CO2 per day, produce half the oxygen we breathe, support almost all marine life, impact human health through harmful algal blooms, contribute to cloud formation, and help to move carbon into the deep ocean.
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2001
Plankton has two roles with respect to climate: first as an indicator of climate change in present day populations and in the fossil record and second as a factor contributing to climate change through, for example, its role in the CO sub(2) cycle, in cloud formation via dimethylsulfide (DMS) production, and in altering the reflectivity of sea water as
M. Edwards, P.C. Reid
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Plankton has two roles with respect to climate: first as an indicator of climate change in present day populations and in the fossil record and second as a factor contributing to climate change through, for example, its role in the CO sub(2) cycle, in cloud formation via dimethylsulfide (DMS) production, and in altering the reflectivity of sea water as
M. Edwards, P.C. Reid
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Deep Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts, 1963
Abstract An instrument to facilitate rapid and continous removal of microplankters from liquid samples is described.
William H. Hamlin, Allan W. H. Bé
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Abstract An instrument to facilitate rapid and continous removal of microplankters from liquid samples is described.
William H. Hamlin, Allan W. H. Bé
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Annual Review of Marine Science, 2019
Archaea are ubiquitous and abundant members of the marine plankton. Once thought of as rare organisms found in exotic extremes of temperature, pressure, or salinity, archaea are now known in nearly every marine environment. Though frequently referred to collectively, the planktonic archaea actually comprise four major phylogenetic groups, each with ...
Alyson E. Santoro+2 more
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Archaea are ubiquitous and abundant members of the marine plankton. Once thought of as rare organisms found in exotic extremes of temperature, pressure, or salinity, archaea are now known in nearly every marine environment. Though frequently referred to collectively, the planktonic archaea actually comprise four major phylogenetic groups, each with ...
Alyson E. Santoro+2 more
openaire +3 more sources