A Blooming Partnership to Advance Ocean Research

Recently announced funding allows team to gather and analyze data on plankton dynamics in Nova Scotia’s coastal waters

Written byNikki Comeau-Dalhousie University News Office
| 3 min read
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Every year in spring and fall, the number of plankton in oceans rapidly increases, causing what’s called an "algal bloom." For fish in the very earliest stages of life, these blooms are a nutritional feast necessary for growth.

As a primary producer in the marine food web, plankton and other microbes play a crucial role supporting life underwater. When fish eggs are released into the water they drift among plankton with the ocean currents. Eventually the eggs hatch into larvae that depend on plankton in the algal bloom to grow.

Related Article: The Ocean’s Living Carbon Pumps

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