Blue-green algae are "cyanobacteria" (SY-ann-oh-bak-TEER-ee-uh).
It is a type of cyano bacteria
bacterias have plasmids. but cyno-bacteria haven't plamids.
In ocean, fresh water& marine biomes
Super glue type adhesives are 'cyanoacrylates' .
Ingredient found in muscle supplement Dragon.
I think you mean a cyano* group Anyway; the carbon is triple bonded to the nitrogen with a free electron making the cyano group [CN]-
To prepare 5-cyano-7-azaindole, cuprous cyanide and 5-bromo-7-azaindole are used as the raw materials and can react in an organic solvent at high temperature (100-250 ℃) to generate 5-cyano-7-azaindole, and the 5-cyano-7-azaindole product with high purity can be obtained through simple post-treatment of the system after reaction.
photosynthesis
The prefix cyano- typically indicates the presence of a carbon atom triple-bonded to a nitrogen atom, forming a nitrile functional group. It is commonly found in compounds such as cyanide and cyanocobalamin.
a cyano based glue (superglue)
They say a cockroach might; bacteria certainly would. I put Biochemistry above because I heard that Four out of the Five Mass Extinctions on Earth were caused by our Earth being almost completely over ridden by Oxygen-hating purple-cyano-bacteria; the fifth was the 63 million-year-old Dinosaur killing asteroid. Short Answer is Mammals and Insects.
The prefix 'Cyano' is used to refer to any number of cyanobacteria that grow all over the planet. Cyan is used because of its use in latin to describe the exact color stated in the question: blue green.