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    Warming seas threaten key phytoplankton species that fuels the food web, study finds

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    Date
    September 14, 2025
    Author
    Hommerschlag, Annika
    Metadata
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    Classification code
    BM20250914_A7
    Excerpt
    For decades, scientists believed Prochlorococcus, the smallest and most abundant phytoplankton on Earth, would thrive in a warmer world. But new research suggests the microscopic bacterium, which forms the foundation of the marine food web and helps regulate the planet’s climate, will decline sharply as seas heat up. A study published Monday in the journal Nature Microbiology found Prochlorococcus populations could shrink by as much as half in tropical oceans over the next 75 years if surface waters exceed about 82 degrees Fahrenheit (27.8 Celsius).
    Citation
    Hammerschlag, A. (2025, September 14). Warming seas threaten key phytoplankton species that fuels the food web, study finds. BusinessMirror, p. A7.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12174/16796
    Associated content
    Online version
    Personal Names
    Ribalet, Francois
    Subject
    phytoplankton marine ecosystems biodiversity global warming sea surface temperature
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    • BusinessMirror [557]

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