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Carlos González
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Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi

Every second breath you draw comes from the ocean.
While forests are frequently hailed as the “lungs of the Earth,” they are not the main source of our planet’s oxygen. That distinction belongs to the ocean—specifically to the countless trillions of microscopic marine organisms drifting in its sunlit upper layers.
Phytoplankton, along with cyanobacteria and other tiny algae, perform photosynthesis just like land plants: they harness sunlight to turn carbon dioxide and water into energy, releasing oxygen as a byproduct.
Though individually invisible to the naked eye, these organisms are extraordinarily productive. Together, they generate an estimated 50–80% of the oxygen present in Earth’s atmosphere.
This massive oxygen factory operates across the world’s oceans, largely out of sight. From space, satellite imagery reveals their seasonal blooms as swirling, paint-like patches of color—vivid evidence of the hidden engine that keeps our air breathable. These blooms respond sensitively to shifts in sea temperature, sunlight, nutrient availability, and ocean currents; scientists continue to study how climate change and other pressures may reshape these patterns in the coming decades.
This does not lessen the vital importance of forests. Trees lock away carbon, support immense biodiversity, regulate local climates, and provide countless other benefits. But when it comes to producing the oxygen we breathe, the ocean—not the rainforest—is the dominant contributor.

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Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi
Carlos González retweetledi




