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Earth

Too-blue oceans: The invisible famine

By Bob Holmes

3 April 2012

Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Phytoplankton make up for their diminutive size with stupendous numbers

(Image: DP Wilson/FLPA)

Editorial:We need joined-up ocean records

IF YOU fill a jar with seawater and peer at it, you probably won’t see much. Filter some through a very fine net and take a look with a microscope, though, and a whole world of plants and animals appears. This invisible world is absolutely vital to life on Earth.

Most of the oxygen you are breathing was made by minuscule algae and bacteria. These plants, known as phytoplankton, provide . From the puniest shrimp to the mightiest whale, almost every creature living in the oceans ultimately relies on phytoplankton, as do many land-dwellers – including us. .

Phytoplankton, in short, help make the world go round. “It’s a big part of the planet’s life-support system. If phytoplankton decline, it threatens the food base of a vast part of the biosphere,” says marine biologist Boris Worm. “There’s less fuel in the tank of the machinery of life, and you just don’t get as far.”

“Phytoplankton are a big part of the planet’s life-support system. If they decline, it threatens the food base of a vast part of the biosphere”

See some of the most photogenic phytoplankton in our galleryMicro-beauties of the sea plant world

This is dramatically illustrated during El Niño events, when plankton levels plummet in the eastern Pacific, with huge consequences…

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