Kingdoms of vegetals and animals are dominated by the carbon chemistry.
Phytoplankton have chloroplasts that contain chlorophyll, which allows them to absorb sunlight for photosynthesis. They are able to perform photosynthesis underwater because light can penetrate the water to reach them, providing the energy needed to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugars. This process helps phytoplankton produce energy and release oxygen into the water.
The majority of phytoplankton are marine and usually help to comprise plankton. Most are too small to be individually seen with the unaided eye but when present in high enough numbers, appear as a green discoloration of the water.
Yes.
The causes of carbon emissions are humans. We humans use fuel by DRIVING TOO MANY FUEL CARS AND TRUCKS!
No answer possible as there are too many to name.
No. Phytoplankton are photosynthesizers they don't have blood. Green plants are photosynthesizers too.
Most phytoplankton are far too small to be seen individually with the human eye. Phytoplankton, like plants, get energy from a process called photosynthesis, and must live in the well-lit surface layers of an ocean, sea, or lake. Some kinds of zooplankton feed on phytoplankton and so do shellfish that live on the ocean floor. Many filter fish also eat it as they cruise the waters.
phytoplankton
Phytoplankton have chloroplasts that contain chlorophyll, which allows them to absorb sunlight for photosynthesis. They are able to perform photosynthesis underwater because light can penetrate the water to reach them, providing the energy needed to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugars. This process helps phytoplankton produce energy and release oxygen into the water.
It can provide the animal with food. Plants also take in Carbon Dioxide and put out oxygen, so they sort of provide animals with air too.
The majority of phytoplankton are marine and usually help to comprise plankton. Most are too small to be individually seen with the unaided eye but when present in high enough numbers, appear as a green discoloration of the water.
Assuming too many terrestrial animals doesn't really disturb things too much. The animals eat the plants, then die. Atmospheric carbon increases from loss of terrestrial biomass, acidifying the oceans. What effect this would ultimately have on Cyanobacteria, earth's primary oxygen liberators, i'm not sure. If there were too many of the marine insects that eat the blue green algae, over a period of millions of years oxygen levels should fall, whether there were other animals to respirate it or not. Free oxygen readily chemically bonds with so many things. Hydrogen, iron, silicon, carbon, etc.
18% of your body is made up of carbon atoms. Most matter in nature is made of carbon too. Are you asking about problems if there is too much CO2 in your body?
Well, darling, when there's an excessive amount of phytoplankton in the water, it can lead to a harmful algal bloom. This bloom can deplete oxygen levels in the water, suffocating our fishy friends who need that oxygen to survive. So, in a nutshell, too much phytoplankton equals not enough oxygen, equals dead fish. It's a tough world out there in the sea, honey.
The algae growing in the fur of sloths do, but the sloth itself doesn't.
no, diamonds contain carbon too. they are inorganic
Valency of carbon is 4. It remains 4 in ethane too.