bioluminescent phytoplankton glowing off the southern coast of Australia
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bioluminescent phytoplankton glowing off the southern coast of Australia

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May i present to you
Diatoms
And an intruder there in the corner
Its such a shame that it's not feasible for phytoplankton to be megafauna(flora?) Because imagine how much more insane it would be to be on a boat during a coccolithophore bloom and just see this big fuck off spheres with plated armour
In Alaska, the Kasatochi volcano blew up in 2008 and sent ash far over the North Pacific Ocean. That ash had iron in it, and iron is like food for tiny ocean plants called phytoplankton. When the ash fell into iron-poor water, the phytoplankton grew very fast, and NASA saw the ocean’s chlorophyll jump by about 150%. Chlorophyll is the green stuff plants use to make food, so more chlorophyll means more tiny ocean plants were growing.
Aerial shot of a phytoplankton bloom. Filmed in the North Sea. From Sea in Motion - Wonder of the North Sea (2023).

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A Colorful Glimpse
Peeking between the clouds, satellites caught a glimpse of a massive phytoplankton bloom off the coast of Greenland in May 2024. (Image credit: L. Dauphin; via NASA Earth Observatory)
CLICK HERE to find HOT PENNATE DIATOMS in YOUR AREA!*
*compound microscope not included
Redraw of NASA Earth Observatory imagery from back in May of phytoplankton blooms - a rapid growth in population fueled by river runoff, increased spring sun, and upwellings of cooler nutrient rich water - in the shallow waters of the Mid-Atlantic Bight
Original and more information here:
Something is brewing in shallow waters offshore of Delaware, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia.