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Blue-Green Bacteria (Not Algae)

~ < 1 of audio

Author note. In explore voice, the facts matter, but so does what they feel like in real life.

Blue-Green Bacteria (Not Algae)

2.65 Billion years ago (+/- 50 million years)

Blue-green algae are not true algae at all. They are cyanobacteria — ancient, photosynthetic bacteria. Because they use sunlight and often look algae-like in ponds, lakes, and wet places, the old label stuck. You still see it today on pool supplies and warning signs, even though the scientific term is cyanobacteria. They are not plants, and they are not true algae. They are bacteria.

These tiny organisms were world-changers. Over immense stretches of time, they helped drive the oxygenation of Earth, slowly transforming the oceans and atmosphere. The Great Oxidation Event is usually dated to about 2.4 billion years ago, but cyanobacteria likely appeared earlier. In that sense, they were not just another bacteria. They were among Earth’s earliest great planetary engineers.

They also matter for another reason. Much later, the ancestors of chloroplasts — the structures plants and algae use for photosynthesis — likely came from cyanobacteria through endosymbiosis. So even though blue-green algae are not true algae, they helped make later algae and plants possible. That gives them an even bigger place in the story of life.


That Science Story, 

was first published on TST 2 months ago.

The flashcard inspired by it is this.

Front: What is the scientific name for blue-green algae?
Back: Cyanobacteria.
All this is part of the broader TST project.
Tidbits are the smallest working units of this project—focused facts, stories, or explanations tied directly to evidence and sources.
Over time, this structure allows related ideas to reconnect naturally across disciplines and across years.

The end!

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