A team of Earth scientists affiliated with multiple institutions in China and the U.S. has found that coastal algae blooms (also known as phytoplankton blooms) have been getting bigger over the past couple of decades. In their study, published in the journal Nature, the group analyzed satellite data supplied to them by NASA to compare the size and frequency of algae blooms along the coasts of the world’s continents.
Click here for original story, Satellite images show coastal algae blooms have grown larger over past two decades
Source: Phys.org