Latest Updates
-
Horoscope for Today May 21, 2026 - Curiosity Rises, Plans Shift -
Paneer Lababdar Recipe: Creamy Restaurant-Style Curry Made Easy -
Mouni Roy’s Cannes 2026 Patola Gown Took 300 Hours To Craft — The Story Of Gujarat’s GI-Tagged Weave -
Bread Pizza Recipe: Your Instant Snack Hack -
India's Hottest City Hit 47.6°C Today — This Is What Heatstroke Looks Like -
Exclusive: Rubina Dilaik Said Yes To The Ward In Seconds: Here's The Raw Truth Behind Why -
PM Modi Turns Viral ‘Melodi’ Nickname Real With Melody Gift To Meloni, Inside India’s Iconic Toffee Origin -
Superglue, A Potato, A Plastic Bag: The Dangerous DIY Contraception Cases That Shocked Doctors -
One Pot Easy Meal: Delicious Veg Pulav Recipe -
'Melodi' Moment Breaks The Internet: PM Modi Meets Giorgia Meloni In Rome, Colosseum Diplomacy Explained
Warmer The Ocean, More The food For Fish
Insync
oi-Staff

And now, a new page unfolds in this study. According to a report in New Scientist, the team found that plankton, the basis of marine food webs, might react predictably to ocean warming.
The team warmed 4-litre 'microcosms' of seawater. They found that phytoplankton grew slightly faster with every degree of temperature rise. This might not be entirely bad news for people, says O' Connor.
The calculation comes simple. More zooplankton means more food for fish, though such top-heavy food webs could crash, she warned. "The effect could be translated up the food chain," said O' Connor. She, however, adds: "But if nutrients in the water are limited, that top-heavy food web structure could be less stable, and crash all together."
AGENCIES
Comments
GET THE BEST BOLDSKY STORIES!
Allow Notifications
You have already subscribed
Article Published On: Thursday, October 8, 2009, 15:02 [IST]



Click it and Unblock the Notifications