red algae.............
If you are referring to the Red Tide, then, it is a form of algae called "Gymnodinium breve". Not everyone agrees on the reason the algae booms, and causes the water to appear red, but it is said to be a natural phenomena and it's not good for the ocean life or people. you shouldn't eat fin fish that are from a red tide area, red tide produces potent neurotoxins.
green
Burgundy is a dark red- complement of red is green so I would go with a green in the same shade.
It depends on the color you want to make...For example, red + blue = purple yellow + red = orange red + white = pink green + yellow = blue yellow + blue = green
2 parts green to 1 part red will result on a brown. Fine-tune the brown once you have that.
Two examples of red tide are the Florida red tide caused by Karenia brevis algae and the California red tide caused by Lingulodinium polyedrum algae. Both of these algae produce toxins that can harm marine life and humans.
No. The red tide is caused by an overgrowth of a type of algae.
No, red tide is not caused by a virus. It is a harmful algal bloom that occurs when certain types of algae grow rapidly and produce toxic or harmful effects on marine life and humans. The algae responsible for red tide are called dinoflagellates.
Red tide is primarily caused by a type of algae called dinoflagellates, not amoebas. These algae can produce toxins that can harm marine life and even be harmful to humans if ingested through contaminated seafood. Amoebas typically do not play a significant role in the formation of red tide events.
Red tide is not caused by fungi. It is primarily caused by certain species of harmful algae called dinoflagellates, such as Karenia brevis. These algae produce toxins that can harm marine life and affect humans who consume contaminated seafood.
Algal blooms that cause red tide are primarily caused by the rapid growth of phytoplankton, particularly species like Karenia brevis. These blooms can be triggered by factors like nutrient pollution from human activities, warm water temperatures, and calm sea conditions that allow the algae to flourish. The resulting high concentrations of algae can release toxins that harm marine life and impact human health.
While the moon's gravity does influence tides in the ocean, red tides are caused by an overgrowth of algae, not by the moon's gravitational pull. Red tides occur when algae populations rapidly increase due to factors like nutrient pollution, warm water temperatures, and calm seas.
Some algae in the red tide contains a poison that can kill fish.
Paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) is a serious illness caused by eating shellfish contaminated with algae that contains a toxin harmful to humans. When this algae increase to high numbers in marine waters, the condition is sometimes (and somewhat erroneously) referred to as a "red tide".
Algae particles form and some are deadly. There are red and green ones. The red ones when lots of them get together can make a red tide. When a red tide occurs from tiny fish like Minos and other small fish to whales wash up on shore, DEAD!!!!!!
A farm pond might turn red during hot dry weather due to a phenomenon known as red tide, which is caused by an overgrowth of red algae. These algae thrive in warm, nutrient-rich environments and can discolor the water in ponds, lakes, and oceans. The heat and lack of rain in hot dry weather can create ideal conditions for red tide to develop.
If you are referring to the Red Tide, then, it is a form of algae called "Gymnodinium breve". Not everyone agrees on the reason the algae booms, and causes the water to appear red, but it is said to be a natural phenomena and it's not good for the ocean life or people. you shouldn't eat fin fish that are from a red tide area, red tide produces potent neurotoxins.