Sentences with phrase «brown tide»

The phrase "brown tide" refers to a large amount of microscopic algae that suddenly grow and make the water turn brown. Full definition
One of the largest brown tides in Long Island history, which extended from Southampton into Nassau County, has finally cleared in the Great South Bay, meaning safety for local marine life.
They discussed threats to Long Island's drinking water supply, harmful algal blooms like brown tide and how a local shellfisherman's personal story inspired Chris's path as a scientist and professor.
While brown tides have also occurred in Great South Bay as recently as 2008 and 2011, the presence of a new ocean inlet in eastern Great South Bay that formed during Hurricane Sandy may be assisting in keeping the blooms away in 2013.
They discussed threats to Long Island's drinking water supply, harmful algal blooms like brown tide and how a local shellfisherman's personal story
People see the brown tide, people see seven feet of snow in Buffalo,» Cuomo said.
People see the brown tide, people see seven feet of snow in Buffalo,» said Cuomo, D - New York.
At the same time, brown tide and algal blooms have negatively impacted the Peconic Bay and its scallops, and nitrogen from sewage systems and cesspools has been identified as «the primary culprit,» according to the release.
«Working on the Peconic Estuary to minimize nitrogen pollution and preventing red and brown tide.
Commonly known as red tides, brown tides and green tides, blue - green algae or cyanobacteria, like Microcystis, are considered harmful algal blooms and can have severe impacts on human health, aquatic ecosystems and the economy.
A brown tide has emerged within some, but not all, of Long Island's south shore estuaries.
Dr. Christopher Gobler, a Professor within Stony Brook University's School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences whose laboratory generated the brown tide data, indicated that the distribution of this year's brown tide comes as good news to some and bad news to others.
«Brown tide has emerged off Long Island, NY in Moriches, Quantuck and Shinnecock Bay, but not in Great South Bay.»
The inability of the brown tide organism to form a bloom in this region is consistent with these conditions and should help promote the growth of hard clams and eelgrass in this bay.»
We are still hopeful that these filter feeders may make this year's bloom less intense in this region than it has been in recent years,» said Gobler noting that in 2011 and 2012, cell densities of the brown tide were more than twice as dense as the current bloom at two million cells per milliliter.
The brown tide alga, Aureococcus anophagefferens, has been notorious on Long Island since it first appeared in 1985 having been responsible for the demise of the largest bay scallop fishery on the US east coast in the Peconic Estuary, the loss of eelgrass across Long Island, and the inhibition of hard clam recovery efforts in Great South Bay.
«The absence of a brown tide in Great South Bay may be a «Gift from Sandy»,» Gobler said.
Abundances of the brown tide organism in this region progressively increased through the month of May and were recorded at maximal densities of more than 800,000 cells per milliliter in western Shinnecock Bay as of June 1st.
Monitoring by the Gobler Laboratory in the Stony Brook University School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences has revealed that a brown tide has developed in eastern Moriches Bay, Quantuck Bay, and western Shinnecock Bay.
For there is an all - too - human evil at work in that part of the world, and the brown tide is only a by - product of its plan.
There is a brown tide infesting the ocean off the shore of Nicaragua.
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