Colorful Phytoplankton Blooms Can Cover Ocean Area the Size of Minnesota — Here's Why
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The sea north of the Hawaiian Islands is part of the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, a swirling current that spans the ocean from Japan to California. This vortex is often called a biological desert, as its waters contain low levels of nutrients, according to Science.

But satellites pointed towards the gyre catch something incredible nearly every summer: a swirling explosion of color across the water’s surface that blossoms and then dies away. This is a phytoplankton bloom.

Although these vibrant eruptions can cover hundreds of thousands of square miles of the ocean, much about how and why these large-scale biological shifts occur has been a mystery. A new study, published in *Progress in Oceanography, *has now revealed the biology of these blooms.


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