What’s up with Bosphorus?

Phytoplanktons change the sober blue waters of the strait into a bright turquoise

June 14, 2017 09:39 pm | Updated June 17, 2017 07:48 am IST - Istanbul

Different shades:  A ship, left, on the blue waters of Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul on May 31.

Different shades: A ship, left, on the blue waters of Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul on May 31.

 

A sudden change in the colour of the Bosphorus Strait that divides the continents of Europe and Asia in Turkey’s largest city Istanbul has surprised residents, with scientists putting it down to a surge in a species of plankton across the Black Sea.

Residents alarmed

The transformation of the usually blue waters of the Bosphorus to a milky turquoise since the weekend caused alarm among some residents.

Some took to social media to express fears that there was a pollution spill, while others even suggested that it could be linked to an earthquake that rocked the Aegean region on Monday afternoon. But scientists said there was no mystery behind the colour change, which was accompanied by a sharper smell.

A ship, left, on the blue waters of Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul on May 31 and, right, people on a ferry look at the turquoise waters on June 13.

People on a ferry look at the turquoise waters on June 13. The transformation was due to the growth of a microorganism in the water.

Ahmet Cemal Saydam, professor of environmental science at Hacettepe University, told the Dogan news agency that the cause was a surge in the number of micro-organism Emiliania huxleyi , also known as Ehux. “This has nothing to do with pollution,” he said, adding it was particularly good for the numbers of anchovies, a popular supper in Istanbul. Anchovies feed on phytoplanktons and tiny fish.

Ehux explosion

“Across the Black Sea there is an explosion of Emiliania huxleyi . This is a blessing for the Black Sea,” he said.

One of the most successful life forms on the planet, Emiliania huxleyi is a single-celled organism visible only under a microscope.

Its astonishing adaptability enables it to thrive in waters from the equator to the sub-Arctic.

The changing colour across the Black Sea was also captured in an image taken from NASA’s Terra satellite.

NASA said the milky colouration is “likely due to the growth of a particular phytoplankton called a coccolithophore”. Emiliania huxleyi is a species of coccolithophore.

“This particular organism is plated with white calcium carbonate and, when present in large numbers, tend to turn the water a milky sheen,” NASA said.

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