Algae
in sentence
75 examples of Algae in a sentence
There's one last elephant in the room: the proteins themselves, which come from algae, bacteria and funguses and all over the tree of life.
Most of us don't have funguses or
algae
in our brains, so what will our brain do if we put that in?
We also are using weeds and we are also using
algae.
So, in the lower you see the GreenLab obviously, and on the right hand side you'll see
algae.
If you are into the business of the next generation of aviation fuels,
algae
is a viable option, there's a lot of funding right now, and we have an
algae
to fuels program.
There's two types of
algae
growing.
Now, around the world they are growing algae, with this racetrack design that you see here.
There is a drawback to algae, however: It's very expensive.
Is there a way to produce
algae
inexpensively?
["Plankton" comes from the Greek "planktos" for wandering] My fellow plankton came in all sizes, from tiny
algae
and bacteria to animals longer than a blue whale.
As a college student, I went on an expedition across the Atlantic with a team of scientists using a high-powered laser to measure microscopic
algae.
All of the red circles are the symbiotic
algae
that live inside the coral tissue, turning sunlight and into sugars they both can use, and all of the little blue dots are the protective bacteria.
The waste water that leaks out is water that already now goes into that coastal environment, and the
algae
that leak out are biodegradable, and because they're living in waste water, they're fresh water algae, which means they can't live in salt water, so they die.
It was a place where we were growing
algae
and welding plastic and building tools and making a lot of mistakes, or, as Edison said, we were finding the 10,000 ways that the system wouldn't work.
Now, we grew
algae
in waste water, and we built tools that allowed us to get into the lives of
algae
so that we could monitor the way they grow, what makes them happy, how do we make sure that we're going to have a culture that will survive and thrive.
We basically take waste water with
algae
of our choice in it, and we circulate it through this floating structure, this tubular, flexible plastic structure, and it circulates through this thing, and there's sunlight of course, it's at the surface, and the
algae
grow on the nutrients.
The
algae
are not going to suffocate because of CO2, as we would.
So the column actually had another very nice feature, and that is the
algae
settle in the column, and this allowed us to accumulate the algal biomass in a context where we could easily harvest it.
Well, we found of course that this material became overgrown with algae, and we needed then to develop a cleaning procedure, and we also looked at how seabirds and marine mammals interacted, and in fact you see here a sea otter that found this incredibly interesting, and would periodically work its way across this little floating water bed, and we wanted to hire this guy or train him to be able to clean the surface of these things, but that's for the future.
Our research covered the biology of the system, which included studying the way
algae
grew, but also what eats the algae, and what kills the
algae.
But if you do not look at grasslands but look down into them, you find that most of the soil in that grassland that you've just seen is bare and covered with a crust of algae, leading to increased runoff and evaporation.
I hope you won't be disappointed, but today, I won't be talking about blue
algae.
Now, the problem is that if I ask, why do we find ourselves in this situation with blue
algae?
This one disguises itself as floating
algae.
And when you look at those tiny green
algae
on the right of the slide here, they are the direct descendants of those who have been pumping oxygen a billion years ago in the atmosphere of the Earth.
SPF 30 is not going to do anything to you over there, and the water is so transparent in those lakes that the
algae
has nowhere to hide, really, and so they are developing their own sunscreen, and this is the red color you see.
And after this storm took off half of its tissue, it became infested with algae, the
algae
overgrew the tissue and that coral died.
The only time we've ever seen this, it's either on red fluorescent
algae
or red fluorescent coral.
The first is that we have fossils of
algae
from 3.5 billion years ago.
But it's also made the sloths themselves a great habitat for other organisms, including algae, which provides a little extra camouflage, and maybe even a snack.
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