Tiny Sea Creatures Ride Rogue Current to Arctic Waters

Plankton from equatorial waters found in the Arctic Ocean in 2010, from left to right: <em>Dictyocoryne truncatum</em> and <em>Didymocyrtis tetrathalamus</em>.
Plankton from equatorial waters found in the Arctic Ocean in 2010, from left to right: Dictyocoryne truncatum and Didymocyrtis tetrathalamus.
(Image credit: (Bjorklund et al., Jnl Micropalaeontology 2012))

Samples of plankton collected in the Arctic Ocean near Norway revealed something surprising: single-celled creatures that belonged thousands of miles to the south where the conditions are balmier.  

This may sound like a story about the surprising effects of global warming, but it isn't. At least not entirely.

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