Algae Provide A Food Bank For Starving Coral

biology, earth, weather, geology, climate change, oceans, global warming
Millennium Island in the South Pacific Ocean formed from a number of smaller islets built on coral reefs.
(Image credit: NASA Earth Observatory.)

(ISNS) -- All over the world, coral reefs, the elaborate graceful structures that serve as the infrastructure of tropical sea life, are turning a deathly white, bleached of all life, mortally wounded. When reefs die, the metropolis of teeming life that surrounds them disappears.

Scientists in Europe found that the bleaching process that kills the reefs is even more complex than they thought. While they were at it, they discovered that the relatively new scientific imaging technique they used to observe the dying reefs may have applications for all kinds of other research, including cancer treatment studies. Science sometimes works that way.

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