Sunday, March 6, 2011

green pool at the south pole

green pool at the south pole - At the south pole there is a pond filled with life, surrounded by white ice, but water in the pond is green, looks striking in the appeal in the surrounding waters. The green color is actually derived from chlorophyll from algae is widely available there. According to Patricia Yager, chief scientist Amundsen Sea Polynya International Research Expedition (ASPIRE), chlorophyll content per liter of water in the pool is five times as much on appeal
my water taken from several places around the Amazon river. Such waters according to Yager usually rich in nutrients, so many kinds of animals that live there. Back According to Yager, the growth of algae which is very much of this could be a boon because algae absorb carbon dioxide as the greenhouse effect. But the next effect is that if the algae growth surged, the zooplankton will also be increased because the natural algae are food for zooplankton. With the number of zooplankton, the carbon dioxide will also increase as the effects of breathing Zooplankton process that releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.