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“When you see algae, don’t swim, wade, waterski, or fish,” the Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department news release said.
Biologists produce rainbow-colored algae Date: March 7, 2013 Source: University of California, San Diego Summary: What can green algae do for science if they weren’t, well, green?
“The sea slug Elysia chlorotica is a small, unassuming creature that performs a remarkable feat: It eats algae and steals its ...
Waterkeepers took samples of the green algae blooms in order to have them analyzed for potential toxins. 1 weather alerts 1 closings/delays. Watch Now. 1 weather alerts 1 closings/delays.
The Florida Department of Health in St. Johns County has issued an alert for the presence of "harmful blue-green algae toxins ...
Algae blooms often look like bright green paint spilled into lake water or scum floating on the surface. Despite its name, this algae can be blue, green, brown or red in color.
Blue-green algae can produce cyanotoxins that can make humans and animals sick if ingested. Despite the name, blue-green algae can be many colors and can look like spilled paint on the surface of ...
Despite the name, blue-green algae can range in color from brown to red, and they are typically spread across the water’s surface or on the shoreline, Dorman said.
What can green algae do for science if they weren't, well, green? That's the question biologists at UC San Diego sought to answer when they engineered a green alga used commonly in laboratories ...