Quick search:
Content Ideas
Result | Content Idea | Research |
---|---|---|
Result | Content Idea | Research |
1 | Scientists Have Long Believed That Ocean Viruses Always Quickly Kill Algae – They Were Wrong |
|
2 | Channeling a Bloom |
|
3 | Why is Hood Canal green? Meet Emiliania huxleyi |
|
4 | Norwegian Waters Have Turned a Vibrant Turquoise Color That Can Be Seen From Space |
|
5 | Researchers unravel reasons of global success in the calcified alga Emiliania huxleyi |
|
6 | A single-cell view on alga-virus interactions reveals sequential transcriptional programs and infection states |
|
7 | 2 thoughts on “Why Norway's Fjords Are Turning Green” |
|
8 | This alga may be seeding the world's skies with clouds |
|
9 | Using microalgae to generate 3D photoluminescent microstructures |
|
10 | ‘Plankton explosion’ turns Istanbul’s Bosphorus turquoise |
|
11 | Phytoplankton on Decline in Southern Ocean |
|
12 | Istanbul's Bosphorus is transformed into a dazzling turquoise |
|
13 | Phytoplankton Factory in the Argentine Sea |
|
14 | Ocean acidification: The limits of adaptation: World's longest laboratory experiment with the single-celled calcifying alga Emiliania huxleyi reveals that evolutionary adaptation to acidification is restricted |
|
15 | The Carcasses of Tiny Marine Organisms Could Be Filling Our Sky With Clouds |
|
16 | Potential of disk-shaped small structures, coccoliths, to promote efficient bioenergy production |
|
17 | Top stories: fresh-baked fossils, cloud-seeding algae, and how ancient farmers braved global cooling |
|
18 | The Acid Test: Armor-Covered Plankton Adapt to Warming World |
|
19 | Why marine phytoplankton calcify |
|
20 | Phytoplankton responding to climate change |
|
21 | Coccolithophore growth and calcification -- a possible role for iron |
|
22 | Phytoplankton Have Turned The Bosphorus A Stunning Turquoise |
|
23 | Ocean Algae Can Evolve Fast to Tackle Climate Change |
|
24 | The damage wrought by acidic oceans hurts more than marine life and lasts longer than you think |
|
25 | Scientists look to remove CO2 from atmosphere by accelerating natural Earth processes |
|
26 | Could Massive White Cliffs Be Forming Beneath Antarctica's Ocean? |
|
27 | Giant virus genomes discovered lurking in DNA of common algae |
|
28 | Visualising algae-eating viruses from space |
|
29 | Viral Glycosphingolipids Induce Lytic Infection and Cell Death in Marine Phytoplankton |
|
30 | Ocean warming and acidification impact on calcareous phytoplankton and reduce its ability to sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide |
|
31 | 'Cheshire Cat' Escape Strategy In Response To Marine Viruses |
|
32 | Researchers find one type of algae able to adapt to warming oceans |
|
33 | You wanted to know: what is this virus that infects the phytoplankton? (Part One) |
|
34 | When a relationship turns ugly |
|
35 | Turquoise Water Off California | The UCSB Current |
|
36 | Virus-host coexistence in phytoplankton through the genomic lens |
|
37 | Increases in certain algae could impact carbon cycle |
|
38 | Haptophytes as a model of cell-free biomineralization |
|
39 | Nutrient ratios in marine particulate organic matter are predicted by the population structure of well-adapted phytoplankton |
|
40 | Chalk-Producing Plankton Turn Ocean Turquoise |
|
41 | Potential of disk-shaped coccolith structures to promote efficient bioenergy production |
|
42 | You wanted to know: what are these phytoplankton? |
|
43 | How viruses have shaped the world |
|
44 | Carbon-sequestering ocean plants may cope with climate changes over the long run |
|
45 | Microscopic marine plants bioengineer their environment to enhance their own growth |
|
46 | Bacterial virulence against an oceanic bloom-forming phytoplankter is mediated by algal DMSP |
|
47 | Night of the Living Algae: To Survive Asteroid Impact, Algae Learned to Hunt |
|
48 | What Will Survive in Hot, Acidic Oceans? |
|
49 | Eco-physiological adaptation shapes the response of calcifying algae to nutrient limitation |
|
50 | Why Santa Barbara's coastal waters turned turquoise • Earth.com |
|
51 | The Black Sea Is Now Turquoise Thanks to a Massive Plankton Bloom |
|
52 | Thinking Too Much About Chalk : Krulwich Wonders... |
|
53 | Climate fix? 'Fertilizing' oceans with iron unlikely to sequester more carbon |
|
54 | Oceanographer Studies Clues to Global Warming, Develops Educational Tools for Science |
|
55 | Selective pressure against horizontally acquired prokaryotic genes as a driving force of plastid evolution |
|
56 | Viruses: an intimate 'enemy', yet essential for life on Earth |
|
57 | Study shows first evidence bacterial-induced apoptosis in algae |
|
58 | Increasing Levels Of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Cause A Rise In Ocean Plankton Calcification |
|
59 | What Gives the Beach That Smell? Sulfur-Making Algae |
|
60 | The reason why you can smell the seaside is traced to algal enzyme |
|
61 | 20 local students are Regeneron Science scholars |
|
62 | Carbon-eaters on the Black sea |
|
63 | Which Ocean Species Will Outlast the Rising Acidity of Seawater? |
|
64 | Regulation of calcification site pH is a polyphyletic but not always governing response to ocean acidification |
|
65 | First evidence bacterial-induced apoptosis in algae: Microbiologists demonstrate apoptosis via bacterial pathogens in single-celled algae. |
|
66 | Calcification – Does It Pay Off in the Future Ocean? |
|
67 | Aquatic and terrestrial cyanobacteria produce methane |
|
68 | Sex, death, viruses, and the oceanic carbon cycle |
|
69 | Falmouth Public Schools Hold Annual Science Fair | Falmouth News |
|
70 | A World to Discover | UVM Today |
|
71 | Connecting marine productivity to sea-spray via nanoscale biological processes: Phytoplankton Dance or Death Disco? |
|
72 | Molecular fossils from phytoplankton reveal secular Pco2 trend over the Phanerozoic |
|
73 | Prasinovirus Attack of Ostreococcus Is Furtive by Day but Savage by Night |
|
74 | Bright blue seas spotted by NASA off Cornwall and Devon may not be good news after all |
|
75 | When the Mediteranean Sea flooded human settlements: Abrupt rise in sea level delayed the transition to agriculture in southeastern Europe |
|
76 | The Pangenome: Are Single Reference Genomes Dead? |
|
77 | Tiny but mighty: Ocean health depends on bacteria and viruses, so what should managers know about them? |
|
78 | Here's what happens when you combine science with hip hop, comic books, and zombies |
|
79 | Alien Waters: Neighboring Seas Are Flowing into a Warming Arctic Ocean |
|
80 | To Avoid a Viral Attack, Microbe Executes a "Cheshire Cat" Escape |
|
81 | Phytoplankton Calcification in a High-CO2 World |
|
82 | Nucleic and Amino Acid Sequences Support Structure-Based Viral Classification |
|
83 | Open science resources for the discovery and analysis of Tara Oceans data |
|
84 | Papers Find Mixed Impacts on Ocean Species from Rising CO2 |
|
85 | Plankton May Hold Up Well to Ocean Acidification |
|
86 | Atmospheric benzenoid emissions from plants rival those from fossil fuels |
|
87 | Database of host-pathogen and related species interactions, and their global distribution |
|
88 | Ocean acidification is deadly threat to marine life, finds eight-year study |
|
89 | Bringing the microbial world into view |
|
90 | Technology publications | MBARI |
|
91 | Fayetteville-Manlius junior gets asteroid named after him for winning international science competition |
|
92 | New WTW Lab and Field Instrumentation Catalogue Now Available in English |
|
93 | Effect of light and nutrient availability on the release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) by Caribbean turf algae |
|
94 | Human impact felt on Black Sea long before industrial era |
|
95 | Chlorovirus PBCV-1 Encodes an Active Copper-Zinc Superoxide Dismutase |
|
96 | Structure of world's largest single cell is reflected at the molecular level |
|
97 | Coccolithophore blooms in the southwest Atlantic |
|
98 | Planktonic growth and fishy futures. | Climate | The Earth Times |
|
99 | Scientists discover cause of mysterious turquoise waters off the coast of Santa Barbara |
|
100 | Students Earn Awards At State Science Fair | Landmarks |
|