Dinoflagellates are an important group of single celled plankton in the world’s oceans. They are in fact the most abundant single celled organisms in the marine environment and important primary producers in the food web. About half of the dinoflagellates are photosynthetic, that mean they harvest sun light to produce energy. The other half either is predatory or parasitic.
Dinoflagellates are also important symbionts of corals and without them most corals can not live. When we refer to coral bleaching in response to climate change we actually refer to the dinoflagellates symbionts that live in them. When the water gets too warm the dinoflagellates leave the coral and then the corals appear white because their color actually comes from dinoflagelate colour pigments and not the coral’s own bodies. If the water stays too warm for to long the dinoflagellates do not come back and eventually the corals die out.
Some dinoflagellates can produce large blooms in the oceans in response to environmental changes. These blooms are sometimes called ‘Red tides’ when a particular dinoflagellate species called Karenia brevis causes the bloom.During such blooms some dinoflagelates species also produce toxins which can cause mass fish killings and other environmental problems.
I hope this gave you a little insight in how dinoflagellates affect our planet and us? However, there is much more to discover about dinoflagellates. If you want to read even more about them you can start here: http://tolweb.org/Dinoflagellates/2445
the dinoflagellates are actually not bad! They are important and good for the planet. The corals for example need them to live. Climate changes however makes it impossible for the dinoflagellates to live with the corals and thus the corals die, so we need to stop climate change, not dinoflagellates. What I referred to in my text as “Red tides’ also is mostly caused by humans. Inflow of high amounts of nutrients (in form of leftover food and waste from big cities) from rivers causes small organisms like dinoflagellates in the oceans to multiply rapidly in numbers. So we need to also be careful to not but so much waste products down our rivers. It is the carelessness of humans that causes a lot of problems, so the dinoflagellates are not to blame :-).
I hope this helps you to understand the problem better now?
Comments
Ellahorsegirl commented on :
Wow that’s very interesting would you mind to describe how we can reduce it please
Sebastian commented on :
Hi, sorry, I do not quite understand what you are asking :-)? What do you want to reduce?
Ellahorsegirl commented on :
Em can you give us some tips on how to reduce dinoflagellates from badness to the world
Sebastian commented on :
Hi,
the dinoflagellates are actually not bad! They are important and good for the planet. The corals for example need them to live. Climate changes however makes it impossible for the dinoflagellates to live with the corals and thus the corals die, so we need to stop climate change, not dinoflagellates. What I referred to in my text as “Red tides’ also is mostly caused by humans. Inflow of high amounts of nutrients (in form of leftover food and waste from big cities) from rivers causes small organisms like dinoflagellates in the oceans to multiply rapidly in numbers. So we need to also be careful to not but so much waste products down our rivers. It is the carelessness of humans that causes a lot of problems, so the dinoflagellates are not to blame :-).
I hope this helps you to understand the problem better now?