The discovery of dark oxygen has shifted our understanding of the deep sea and potentially life on Earth. But we still don’t ...
7d
Smithsonian Magazine on MSNMicroplastics Are Making Photosynthesis Harder for Plants—and That Could Slash Crop Yields, Study SuggestsOn average, these little particles could reduce photosynthesis in plants and algae by up to 12 percent, according to the ...
Could lumpy metallic rocks in the deepest, darkest reaches of the ocean be making oxygen in the absence of sunlight?
In the sunlit surface layer of oceans Like land plants and seagrasses, microscopic marine algae known as phytoplankton also feed on CO2 and use photosynthesis to produce energy. Seagrasses and ...
A team of environmental researchers, Earth scientists and pollution specialists at Nanjing University, the Chinese Academy of ...
Princeton University and Xiamen University researchers report that in tropical and subtropical oligotrophic waters, ocean ...
(C) In the coastal ocean, photosynthesis, decomposition and re-exchanging of CO2 with the atmosphere still continue. Solid organic carbon (e.g., soil particles, phytoplankton cells) is buried in ...
4d
ScienceAlert on MSNMicroplastics Are Disrupting Photosynthesis, And The Impact Could Be HugeMicroplastic impacts varied across plant type and location, but average reductions in photosynthesis rates varied between ...
Microplastics can cut a plant’s ability to photosynthesize by up to 12 percent, new research shows microplastics are ...
Plants and microorganisms on land and in the sea use photosynthesis to produce biomass (living material): they absorb specific wavelengths of sunlight using the pigment chlorophyll, to convert ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results