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Public News Service on MSNMI scientist: Humans, not climate change, to blame for toxic lakesEach summer, more lake beaches shut down as toxic algae blooms spread across the water and while climate change is often ...
Recent cyanobacteria surveys of the Hurunui River at SH1 have shown the cover of potentially toxic algae (benthic cyanobacteria) in the river have reduced and is now below levels that are of concern ...
NOAA layoffs could harm Great Lakes water quality and weather forecasting, raising concerns for public health and ecosystems.
Scientists are gaining new insights into how plankton supports life on Earth — just as climate change is changing everything.
In a laboratory at Curtin University in Australia, researchers have stumbled upon what might seem like a magical ...
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