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A substantial amount of algae called enteromorpha prolifera has invaded the waters and turned everything in its reach a bright green color. The algae bloom is 70 meters wide and 100 meters long, according to China Daily. Read more: www.nydailynews.com... njTszIQ
Originally posted by CaDreamer
reply to post by incrediblelousminds
probably chemical fertilizers dumped into the water creating very high phosphate levels (simply explained as algae food) thus creating an algae feeding frenzy exploding their population exponentially.
reports that the type is from Lolland, Denmark and that it has been lost.
Originally posted by CaDreamer
reply to post by survival
phosphates or broken down organo-phosphates (fertilizers and pesticides) are in fact what algae thrive on, i deal with it on a daily basis. i work on pools in a highly agricultural area. i have seen first had what fertilizers and pesticides do to algae growth in water. its like algae steroids.
Originally posted by Aliensun
reply to post by incrediblelousminds
Perhaps they've accidently created a new life form with their crazy and indiscriminate dumping of chemical wastes into their own waters.
The potential of algae to be used as microscopic power plants was first discovered by Hans Gaffron, a German researcher who fled the Nazi party and came to the University of Chicago in the 1930s. Gaffron observed in 1939 that the algae would for a then-unknown reason sometimes switch from producing oxygen to instead creating hydrogen, but only for a short period of time.
For 60 years, researchers tried to harness the power potential of algae, without success.
A breakthrough came in 1999 when University of California at Berkeley professor Tasios Melis, along with researchers from the National Renewable Energy Lab, discovered that depriving the algae of sulfur and oxygen would enable it to produce hydrogen for sustained periods of time.