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Related: About this forumWarming seas threaten key phytoplankton species that fuels the food web, study finds
https://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/warming-seas-threaten-key-phytoplankton-species-21036934.phpWarming seas threaten key phytoplankton species that fuels the food web, study finds
By ANNIKA HAMMERSCHLAG,
Associated Press
Updated Sep 8, 2025 8:56 a.m.
SEATTLE (AP) For decades, scientists believed Prochlorococcus, the smallest and most abundant phytoplankton on Earth, would thrive in a warmer world. But new research suggests the microscopic bacterium, which forms the foundation of the marine food web and helps regulate the planets climate, will decline sharply as seas heat up.
A study published Monday in the journal Nature Microbiology found Prochlorococcus populations could shrink by as much as half in tropical oceans over the next 75 years if surface waters exceed about 82 degrees Fahrenheit (27.8 Celsius). Many tropical and subtropical sea surface temperatures are already trending above average and are projected to regularly surpass 86 degrees Fahrenheit (30 Celsius) over that same period.
Prochlorococcus inhabit up to 75% of Earths sunlit surface waters and produce about one-fifth of the planets oxygen through photosynthesis. More crucially, Ribalet said, they convert sunlight and carbon dioxide into food at the base of the marine ecosystem.
In the tropical ocean, nearly half of the food is produced by Prochlorococcus, he said. Hundreds of species rely on these guys.
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Warming seas threaten key phytoplankton species that fuels the food web, study finds (Original Post)
cbabe
Sep 9
OP
NNadir
(36,604 posts)1. The other issue would be the minor point of oxygen.
cbabe
(5,599 posts)3. Yep. That's a point.
Botany
(75,316 posts)2. The Blue Whale faces extinction because the warming seas do not support their food supply called Krill.
The Costal Redwoods face a precious future because the change in temperatures in the Pacific
and the fogs that bring moisture to the flat needles of the Sequoia sempervirens
Costal Redwood
.. from those fog clouds which then fall to earth and waters the trees roots. That water from
those fogs also sets up the ecological conditions that are beneficial to the trees such as helping
the lichens that live in the tree canopy some of which fix atmospheric nitrogen and when they fall
to the forest floor they help feed the Redwoods.
But not to worry Trump is shutting down NOAAs atmospheric observatory on Mauna Loa which
monitors CO 2 which drives global warming.
Sorry to babble. Botant =