When we encounter bodies of water in nature, we might expect hues of blue, from the pale cyan shade of lagoons to the navy blue of deep lakes. But pink water—where on Earth could that be found? At (deep breath) El Parque Natural de Las Lagunas de La Mata y Torrevieja in Alicante, Spain. Here, there are two lakes: one green and one pink, and it is the latter that you see on our homepage. The highly saline water, dotted with clusters of salt crystals, is the perfect environment for microscopic algae, which are rich in carotenes. This results in the rosy tinge that protects the algae from solar radiation. And the pink is just getting started, as the algae are eaten by tiny crustaceans, which turn pink and are then eaten by flamingos, which acquire the rosy hue as well.
Laguna de Torrevieja, Spain
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Southern gemsbok in the savannah, Botswana
-
International Lighthouse Lightship Weekend
-
Things are looking up
-
Marine Corps War Memorial, Arlington, Virginia
-
Superbloom in Carrizo Plain National Monument, California
-
World Environment Day
-
Visiting Ahch-To on Star Wars Day
-
Juneteenth
-
International Whale Shark Day
-
The tortoise and the finch
-
The forecast calls for blooms
-
Why, aloe there
-
Upstate autumn
-
Manarola, Cinque Terre National Park, Liguria, Italy
-
Celebrating Mexico in a Cultural Capital
-
Diamond Beach, Iceland
-
Muniellos Nature Reserve
-
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
-
Summer winds down in the Southern Hemisphere
-
International Mountain Day
-
International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival, Harbin, China
-
Honoring some real heroes of World War II
-
St. Joseph North Pier Inner and Outer Lights, Michigan
-
Nature Photography Day
-
Vancouver Coastal Sea wolves, Great Bear Rainforest, Canada
-
Here we honor the women who ve served
-
International Chameleon Day
-
Frozen fun in the Canadian cold
-
We stand with Ukraine
-
The parenting of a piping plover
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

