While the thought of wiggling your toes in the azure waters may be
appealing, not all seas, oceans, and lakes are blue.
Because of energy lost through vibrational effects, bodies of water
usually appear blue. Some seas are pale blue while others are an
intense, turquoise blue. Thanks to other influences such as
cyanobacteria, water is sometimes green, red, or even brown.
Is the Red Sea red?
The Red Sea’s water is predominantly blue. There are a number of
theories as to the origins of the name. Some believe it was named by
early travelers because of the region’s reddish mineral-rich mountains.
It is surrounded by a desiccated and largely barren landscape, and its
hot, salty waters contain beautiful coral reefs. It may appear red in
places because of reflections of the surrounding landscape, or reds in
the coral on the seabed. As one early traveler noted, "In some places it
is very green, in others white and yellow, according to the color of
the earth or sand at the bottom."
The waters of the Red Sea are blue, though they may appear red due to reflections of the surrounding reddish landscape or reddish coral on its seabed.
|
Scientist sampling a Trichodesmium bloom. The colors of the
slick are sometimes vivid due to the photosynthetic pigments in the
algae, including green chlorophyll and purple phycoerythrin.
|
Today, it is widely accepted that the Red Sea is named for an occasional bloom of the cyanobacteria,
Trichodesmium erythraeum
algae, which clouds and muddies the usually translucent blue-green
waters. These cyanobacteria appear as red and pinkish blankets on the
surface of these waters. After blooming, the
Trichodesmium erythraeum die, and they turn the sea reddish-brown.
Vast slick of cyanophyte algae visible from space. The algal
cells coalesce in strings and clumps. As the cells age, they become
buoyant . In calm weather, the cells aggregate into huge slicks.
(Australia)
Colors from Cyanobacteria
The relative abundance of phycobilin pigments, the reddish
phycoerythrin and the blue phycocyanin, explain the color of
cyanobacteria. Microscopically, the blue phycocyanin pigment, the green
chlorophyll, and the accessory pigments give rise to blue-green algae.
Species of cyanobacteria differ in their ratios of phyocyanin and
phycoerythrin.
The appearance of a body of water changes drastically during a
"bloom" of cyanobacteria, but the color is also not always due to
pigments alone. For example, lakes in the Swiss Alps have been known to
be turned blood-red by
Oscillatoria rubescens blooms because they
have refractive pseudovacuoles (not bounded by a tonoplast membrane)
rather than by excessive phycoerythrin. While the Red Sea may have been
named for its periodic blooms of
Trichodesmium erythraceum, the aquatic disaster, red tide, is not caused by cyanobacteria, but instead by dinoflagellates (Pyrrophyta).
Cyanobacteria such as Hammatoidea, Heterohormogonium, Albrightia, Scytonematopsis, Thalopophila, Myxocarcina and Colteronema
give thermal springs and geyser pools beautiful color patterns - from
red to purple and the complete visible spectrum of colors between.
In ancient sedimentary rock, the transition to an aerobic
atmosphere is marked by a shift in the color of the layers from gray to
red. These cyanobacteria obviously marked the planet in a very permanent
way. The change in rock colors marks a time about 2.5 billion years
ago, at the end of the Archaean Era and the beginning of the Proterozoic
Time.
Frequently, terrestrial "blooms" produce a gooey slime that is black
in color because virtually all wavelengths of light are absorbed by the
combination of chlorophyll and the accessory pigments. A disease of
coral heads is caused by a cyanobacterium (
Phormidium corallactinium)
and is know as "black line disease." The rocks in the supralittoral
fringe (splash zone) of many tropical shores are covered with epilithic (
Scytonema, Gleocapsa and
Pleurocapsa) or impregnated with endolithic (
Mastigocoleus) cyanobacteria. This zone is often called the "black" zone because of the color of these cyanobacteria.
The first cyanobacteria (
Cyanophyta) appear in fossils about
2.8 billion years old, and created the opportunity for evolution of more
complex oxygen-reliant organisms. They have different biochemistry than
Archaebacteria and were the first dominant organisms to use oxygenic
photosynthesis. Their photosystem splits water and uses its electrons
and protons to drive photosynthesis. As a byproduct of this new reaction
system, oxygen gas (O2) was produced in abundance for the first time.
This was a fundamental change in the Earth’s atmosphere, and its impact
was observed in all surface layers. As cyanobacteria increased the
levels of oxygen in the atmosphere, the iron in surface sediments was
oxidized into red ferric oxide.
No comments:
Post a Comment