By the beginning of June this year, approximately 38 million tons of Sargassum drifted towards the coasts of the Caribbean ...
Melting Arctic ice is revealing a hidden ecosystem where bacteria convert nitrogen gas into nutrients, fueling algae growth.
Melting Arctic ice enables nitrogen-fixing microbes to feed algae and absorb carbon, challenging old climate views.
The discovery of non-cyanobacteria diazotrophs underneath Arctic sea ice could change our understanding of the food web, as well as the ocean's carbon budget.
Algae blooms occur regularly in the carribean, the Gulf of Mexico and northern south america, driven by upwelling of ...
Researchers found that the fringes of Arctic sea ice tend to host more nitrogen-fixing bacteria and higher nitrogen-fixing ...
Researchers are one step closer to understanding how some plants survive without nitrogen. Their work could eventually reduce ...
Gingko Bioworks is extending a partnership agreement with Bayer to continue developing microbial nitrogen fixation ...
Melting Arctic ice reveals a hidden ecosystem where bacteria convert nitrogen into algae-nourishing nutrients, potentially impacting global carbon levels and climate equations.
As Arctic sea ice melts, new life may emerge from the thaw. Researchers have discovered that bacteria beneath and along the melting ice are converting nitrogen gas into a form that fuels algae. The ...
Scientists have discovered special yet impossible life forms under Arctic ocean ice, marking a paradigm shift in the climate ...