Not exact matches
«When Paul Cox came out
with his paper saying that
cyanobacteria produce BMAA,» he says
with a lingering Texan twang, «I thought, whoa, we'd better look into this because here in Florida we get some really big
blooms.»
Most strikingly, they discovered that living within 18 miles of a lake
with high levels of dissolved nitrogen — a pollutant from fertilizer and sewage that feeds algae and
cyanobacteria blooms — raised the odds of belonging to an ALS hot spot by 167 percent.
With warmer temperatures associated with climate change, cyanobacteria are blooming in more northern latitu
With warmer temperatures associated
with climate change, cyanobacteria are blooming in more northern latitu
with climate change,
cyanobacteria are
blooming in more northern latitudes.