pool algae...YUCK!!!! it's algae basiclly and it grows FAST!!!!!!! Basiclly the picture tells all. The pool became green and don't imagine swimming in it!!!
This is echosong101lol speaking to the person who wrote this^^^^^
Pool algae is not that bad you know.Its nature.To be honest, I wouldn't mind swimming in it.(I would just want goggles)!!
When black algae appear in a swimming pool, it can look like a black discoloration or black spots on the sides or the bottom of the pool. This occurs when there is not enough chlorine in the pool, so treatment is necessary to get rid of this algae.
the same type that grows in lakes
Algae will grow in temperatures from approx 5 to 40 degrees Celsius (approx 40 to 100 Fahrenheit). It does depend on which specific types of algae, as well as the colony size, but this is the general temperature tolerance for growth of algae.
Algae reproduce by means of spores. The oceans are always releasing these spore into the air, and any exposed water is going to have spores fall into it, which can then grow into algae, as long as there is sunlight and some mineral content to provide the algae with the necessary ingredients for growth.
If there is moisture available algae can grow in the desert.
If there is moisture available algae can grow in the desert.
Yes. Chlorine is used to prevent the growth of algae. Some pools use salt.
Answer: Perhaps you have an algae problem.
No, algae is not a problem in a desert. It only appears for a short time in pools that form after summer rains.
It depends upon what kind of algae you are referring to. In general, most algae that humans interact with (the green stuff in pools and lakes, the symbiotic lichen algae on trees, etc.) do require oxygen, although aquatic algae derive their oxygen from the dissolved oxygen in the water.
Black algae shows itself as small black spots on the pools floor walls and fittings untreated they grow. Green Algae often starts as a greenish tinge on the walls or other surfaces of the pool and spreads into the water making it turn green if left untreated.
To prevent algae from growing and to kill bacteria
Yes. Scientists have found that desert dust does indeed allow algae to grow.
Algae can grow back in as soon as 5 hrs.