
Greenland’s ice slab algae absorbs light and accelerate melting
Laura Halbach
It is likely to expand dark algae in the surface of the Arctic ice sheet in the future, which will increase, melting, increase and heating the sea level.
“These algae are not new phenomena,” says James Bradley Marseille, France at the Mediterranean Oceanography, France. “But if they bloom more intense, or the flower is widespread, then it would be important to consider in future future projections of the sea level.”
Greenland ice sheet is the one that covers the island most fast melts for increasing temperaturebecoming a single collaborator between sea levels around the world.

Recipe Algae under the microscope
Nature Communications
Recipe Algal species bloom in ice patches, which are called ablation zones, as the snow lines are rounded on the ice sheet every summer. The flower darkens the ice, reducing the reflection of the reflection and absorbing more heat, and thus melt in these areas by calculating 10 to 13 percent.
Feedback this loop to better understand, Bradley and his colleagues wrapped Recipe From the southwestern ice tip examined cells and cells with advanced images techniques.
The results revealed that the algae are highly adapted to nutrient terms so that nutrients can be included in ice, suggesting that nutrients are scarce.
The global warming is already the snow lines that cause higher heights over time, showing more ice, is more reflective than the snow and so it melts. Ice alga has added another layer to these interactions that will be accounted for in future climate projections.
“We’ve been studying Glacier Algal Blooms a few years ago, but one of the big questions left to grow has to grow so in these ice nutrients,” says Christopher Williamson In Bristol University, the United Kingdom, who did not participate in the project. “Whether this puzzle is a great part of how many nutrients needed to take and store alphatic glacial cells and take over low nutrients available in the system. This study makes these things using leading methodologies.”
Themes: