Cyanobacteria help form Earth's oceans and air from doing its own natural process. Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis then distributed oxygen into the water and air.
Because the water water can sometimes be, or cold.
The oceans can store a great amount of heat energy. That is why most places along the coast have a milder climate that further inland.
The heat transfers through the entire ocean, since its technically one big global ocean.
oxygen and carbon dioxide
its either clouds, oceans, or earths surface sorry if it didn't help hooray if it did either way i think this is right scientificly.......just kidding i ain't no scientist!;)
Probably the most obvious difference between cyanobacteria and the bacteria living in your mouth is the green color of cyanobacteria, pointing to probably the most important thing they can do that human oral bacteria cannot, and that is photosynthesis. Cyanobacteria have their characteristic color because of the chlorophyll pigment which allows them to convert light energy into food. Cyanobacteria can also form long filaments and sheets, which is something mouth bacteria cannot do. Cyanobacteria also produce toxins that are deadly to humans, something that oral bacteria obviously do not do, although recent research indicates that certain oral bacteria may help in the formation of atherosclerotic plaques, leading to possible heart disease, so they may be dangerous to humans (besides tooth decay) for other reasons.
The gas which help in forming the earth's protective shield is ozone gas. It is present in the atmosphere as the ozone layer in the stratospheric regionof atmosphere.
Yes
Cyanobacteria are one of the earliest life forms known to have existed on Earth: stromatolites (which you can see on certain coastlines) are mounds of fossilised cynabacteria - the oldest ones to be found are about 3.5 million years old. Because cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis, they're believed to have been one of the main contributory factors to the rise in early atmospheric oxygen levels. Cyanobacteria still exist today; until recently we called them blue-green algae, & they look remarkably similar to their early cousins.
We can help Sea Otters by not throwing trash in the oceans and lakes
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how do the earth's poles help cool the earth's temp