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Spectacular Bloom in the Barents Sea

Credit: Credit: Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC, Posted on: Thursday, 24 July 2003, 06:00 CDT Download full size image

The Barents Sea north of Norway was awash in colorful swirls of blue and green on July 19, 2003. This spectacular display of color reveals the biological richness of these cold, nutrient-rich waters—a bloom of tiny marine plants called phytoplankton. The colors can be produced by a variety of pigments, including chlorophyll, that the plants use to harness sunlight for photosynthesis. The brightest blue color is sometimes the result of a kind of phytoplankton called a coccolithophore that has a calcium carbonate (chalk) covering. This chalky covering is bright white, and mixes with the blue reflection off the water to produce brilliant hues.

Near the coast, the reflection coming back to the spacecraft may be mixed with sediment and other organic matter churned up by tides or washed out to sea by rivers. The influx of nutrients that comes from the outflow of rivers is one reason why phytoplankton blooms are common in coastal areas. Another reason is that coastal areas are o






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