• About BreezyScroll
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
Saturday, July 18, 2026
BreezyScroll
  • Home
  • Breezy Stories
  • Technology
  • Gaming
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • World
  • Money
  • Sports
  • Breezy Explainer
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Breezy Stories
  • Technology
  • Gaming
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • World
  • Money
  • Sports
  • Breezy Explainer
No Result
View All Result
BreezyScroll
No Result
View All Result

Home  /  Breezy Explainer  /  Breezy explainer: Snow blood and its link to climate change

Breezy explainer: Snow blood and its link to climate change

by KS Arpitha
August 24, 2022
in Breezy Explainer, Environment
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Breezy explainer: Snow blood and its link to climate change

The increasing amount of snow blood is worrying scientists. They are becoming more predominant than ever in the summer and accelerating snow melt.

What is snow blood? Why is it a threat to the climate?

‘Snow blood’ are algae first described in the third century BC by Aristotle. However, in 2019, they formally identified and named Sanguina nivaloides. Also called the pink snow and watermelon snow, scientists are racing to better understand the algae before it is too late. Huge volumes of snow are falling with the rising global temperature. The phenomenon is hitting the Alps disproportionately hard. 

“When it’s in the snow, it accumulates a pigment, like a sunscreen to protect itself from the light intensity. Like us, when we go skiing, or even here, today, we are getting sunburnt and we use sunscreen. The algae, to protect themselves, well we think it’s for this because we don’t have the proof yet, accumulate this red pigment that overcomes the green. So they are fundamentally green, but it’s hidden behind a big shield of red pigments,” explained Eric Marechal. Marechal is a research director at the Scientific Research National Center in Grenoble. He and his teammates are collecting samples from Le Brevent mountain.

Why are researchers rushing to study this?

“There are two reasons for studying the algae. The first is that it is an area that is little explored, and the second reason is that this little-explored area is melting before our eyes. So it’s kind of urgent, we have to quickly deploy means to collect samples, this is what we are doing today, and then study them with all the modern means that exist in biology,” stated the researcher.

Additionally, scientists including Alberto Amato believe volumes of snow blood appear to be increasing due to climate change. Higher amounts of carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere are also favoring algal blooms. Amato is a genetic engineering researcher from CEA Centre de Grenoble. Moreover, with the spread of this algae, glaciers and snow melting will increase worldwide. “The warmer it is, the more algae there are and the more the snow melts quickly. It’s a vicious circle and we are trying to understand all the mechanisms to understand this circle so we can try to do something about it,” stated Amato.

Tags: Climate Change
ShareTweetShareSend

Recent Articles

FIFA World Cup 2026 Final: Five Historic Records Lionel Messi Could Break Against Spain

FIFA World Cup 2026 Final: Five Historic Records Lionel Messi Could Break Against Spain

July 18, 2026
Pakistan to Make Miss World Debut With Aniqa Jamal Iqbal, Ending Decades of Absence

Pakistan to Make Miss World Debut With Aniqa Jamal Iqbal, Ending Decades of Absence

July 18, 2026
alien chemistry New Jersey meteorite meteorite organic molecules SETI Institute NASA Ames Research Center carbonaceous chondrite origins of life

Scientists Discover Unusual ‘Alien Chemistry’ Inside Meteorite That Crashed Through a New Jersey Home

July 18, 2026
Missing ‘Asteroid’ Tracked Since 1998 Turns Out to Be a Rare Dark Comet, Scientists Say

Missing ‘Asteroid’ Tracked Since 1998 Turns Out to Be a Rare Dark Comet, Scientists Say

July 18, 2026
BreezyScroll Logo

BreezyScroll is a global content platform that provides a unique experience of enhancing the knowledge quotient for its audience by providing the latest news and updates from various categories such as politics, sports, entertainment, technology, and more.
The platform aims to provide a concise and easy-to-read format for its users. BreezyScroll covers news stories from around the world, majorly the United States. The platform was launched in 2021 and has become one of the fastest-growing content companies in the US.

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • Alaska
  • Animals
  • Asia
  • Athletics
  • Australia
  • Auto
  • Basketball
  • Bollywood
  • Brand
  • Breezy Explainer
  • Breezy Feature
  • Breezy Soul
  • Business
  • Canada
  • Chess
  • China
  • Coronavirus
  • Cricket
  • DIY
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • EPL
  • Europe
  • Exclusive Interview
  • Exclusive Review
  • Football
  • Gaming
  • Health
  • Hollywood
  • India
  • International
  • K Pop
  • Law
  • Lifestyle
  • Middle East
  • Money
  • NFL
  • North America
  • OTT
  • Paris Olympics
  • Pets
  • Press Releases
  • Russia
  • Science
  • South America
  • Space
  • Sports
  • Startup
  • Technology
  • Tennis
  • Tennis
  • The Achievers
  • The US
  • Travel
  • UK
  • UK
  • Uncategorized
  • World
  • WWE

Trending Topics

AI Apple Australia Biden California Canada ChatGPT China Climate Change Coronavirus COVID-19 Donald Trump Elon Musk Featured Florida Google IPL Iran Japan Joe Biden Mars Meta Moon NASA NBA Netflix New York North Korea Ohio OpenAI Putin Russia Russia-Ukraine crisis South Korea Taliban Tesla Texas TikTok Trump Twitter UFO UK Ukraine USA Virat Kohli

No Result
View All Result
  • About BreezyScroll
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2024 · BreezyScroll.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Breezy Stories
  • Technology
  • Gaming
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • World
  • Money
  • Sports
  • Breezy Explainer

© 2024 · BreezyScroll.com

Go to mobile version