Algae can be beautifully bioluminescent in dark waters or show up in interesting colors near shore. But have you ever seen a “red tide”? Algae grow normally in the United States’ coastal waters … but ...
Riley Rackliffe follows the stinky green blobs as they travel across Lake Mohave. The aquatic biologist leads a two-man team for the National Park Service, dipping a long stick into the reservoir ...
A toxic algae bloom is causing sea lions and other mammals ... but sick animals are flooding marine mammal care centers up and down the California coast. The toxin is killing birds, dolphins ...
A toxic algae bloom is causing sea lions and other mammals ... but sick animals are flooding marine mammal care centers up and down the California coast. The toxin is killing birds, dolphins ...
As the algae bloom, small fish consume it, and when sea lions eat the fish, the toxin enters their systems. "As that toxin builds up in their system, it’s causing all sorts of different issues ...
A new study by the University of the Philippines Diliman revealed two optimal models for predicting algal blooms, ...
A bloom of harmful algae off the coast again this year is creating a neurotoxin that has caused sea lions and other marine mammals to exhibit Parkinson's-like symptoms up and down the Southern ...
Red tide is a type of naturally occurring algae bloom that impacts the Sunshine State nearly every year: generally cropping up in the late summer or early fall, according to the Florida Fish and ...
Red tide is a type of naturally occurring algae bloom that impacts the Sunshine State nearly every year: generally cropping up in the late summer or early fall, according to the Florida Fish and ...