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algae affected by temp?
Bill Kirkpatrick wrote:
wrote: Eh? Life is a constructive process. It frankly doesn't care if, or when, "something runs out" if it has no biological use for that particular "something". Thus, BGA, or anything else, simply cannot grow for LACK of a required component. I think that this is "lack" not in terms of BGA but in terms of things (like higher plants) which compete with it for PO4 or whatever. The analogy would be your room full of mice and single elephant where there were 100 peanuts but only 1 cup of water/day. In that context, the mice would eventually outlast the elephant and establish a breeding colony due to a "lack" of water. Yes? You also state repeatedly that BGA fix their own nitrogen. Is that true for all cyanobacteria? Just curious. -coelacanth |
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