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Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future

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dc.contributor.author Wells, ML
dc.contributor.author Trainer, VL
dc.contributor.author Smayda, TJ
dc.contributor.author Karlson, BSO
dc.contributor.author Trick, CG
dc.contributor.author Kudela, RM
dc.contributor.author Ishikawa, A
dc.contributor.author Bernard, Stewart
dc.contributor.author Wulff, A
dc.contributor.author Anderson, DM
dc.contributor.author Cochlan, WP
dc.date.accessioned 2016-07-11T10:51:39Z
dc.date.available 2016-07-11T10:51:39Z
dc.date.issued 2015-11
dc.identifier.citation Wells, M.L., Trainer, V.L., Smayda, T.J., Karlson, B.S.O., Trick, C.G., Kudela, R.M., Ishikawa, A., Bernard, S., Wulff, A., Anderson, D.M. and Cochlan, W.P. 2015. Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future. Harmful Algae, Vol 49, pp. 68-93 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1568-9883
dc.identifier.uri http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1568988315300615
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8623
dc.description Copyright: 2015 Elsevier. Due to copyright restrictions, the attached PDF file only contains the abstract of the full text item. For access to the full text item, please consult the publisher's website. For access to the full text item, please consult the publisher's website. The definitive version of the work is published in Harmful Algae, Vol 49, pp. 68-93 en_US
dc.description.abstract Climate change pressures will influence marine planktonic systems globally, and it is conceivable that harmful algal blooms may increase in frequency and severity. These pressures will be manifest as alterations in temperature, stratification, light, ocean acidification, precipitation-induced nutrient inputs, and grazing, but absence of fundamental knowledge of the mechanisms driving harmful algal blooms frustrates most hope of forecasting their future prevalence. Summarized here is the consensus of a recent workshop held to address what currently is known and not known about the environmental conditions that favor initiation and maintenance of harmful algal blooms. There is expectation that harmful algal bloom (HAB) geographical domains should expand in some cases, as will seasonal windows of opportunity for harmful algal blooms at higher latitudes. Nonetheless there is only basic information to speculate upon which regions or habitats HAB species may be the most resilient or susceptible. Moreover, current research strategies are not well suited to inform these fundamental linkages. There is a critical absence of tenable hypotheses for how climate pressures mechanistically affect HAB species, and the lack of uniform experimental protocols limits the quantitative cross-investigation comparisons essential to advancement. A HAB “best practices” manual would help foster more uniform research strategies and protocols, and selection of a small target list of model HAB species or isolates for study would greatly promote the accumulation of knowledge. Despite the need to focus on keystone species, more studies need to address strain variability within species, their responses under multifactorial conditions, and the retrospective analyses of long-term plankton and cyst core data; research topics that are departures from the norm. Examples of some fundamental unknowns include how larger and more frequent extreme weather events may break down natural biogeographic barriers, how stratification may enhance or diminish HAB events, how trace nutrients (metals, vitamins) influence cell toxicity, and how grazing pressures may leverage, or mitigate HAB development. There is an absence of high quality time-series data in most regions currently experiencing HAB outbreaks, and little if any data from regions expected to develop HAB events in the future. A subset of observer sites is recommended to help develop stronger linkages among global, national, and regional climate change and HAB observation programs, providing fundamental datasets for investigating global changes in the prevalence of harmful algal blooms. Forecasting changes in HAB patterns over the next few decades will depend critically upon considering harmful algal blooms within the competitive context of plankton communities, and linking these insights to ecosystem, oceanographic and climate models. From a broader perspective, the nexus of HAB science and the social sciences of harmful algal blooms is inadequate and prevents quantitative assessment of impacts of future HAB changes on human well-being. These and other fundamental changes in HAB research will be necessary if HAB science is to obtain compelling evidence that climate change has caused alterations in HAB distributions, prevalence or character, and to develop the theoretical, experimental, and empirical evidence explaining the mechanisms underpinning these ecological shifts. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Elsevier en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Workflow;15968
dc.subject Harmful algal blooms en_US
dc.subject HAB en_US
dc.title Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Wells, M., Trainer, V., Smayda, T., Karlson, B., Trick, C., Kudela, R., ... Cochlan, W. (2015). Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8623 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Wells, ML, VL Trainer, TJ Smayda, BSO Karlson, CG Trick, RM Kudela, A Ishikawa, et al "Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future." (2015) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8623 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Wells M, Trainer V, Smayda T, Karlson B, Trick C, Kudela R, et al. Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future. 2015; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8623. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Wells, ML AU - Trainer, VL AU - Smayda, TJ AU - Karlson, BSO AU - Trick, CG AU - Kudela, RM AU - Ishikawa, A AU - Bernard, Stewart AU - Wulff, A AU - Anderson, DM AU - Cochlan, WP AB - Climate change pressures will influence marine planktonic systems globally, and it is conceivable that harmful algal blooms may increase in frequency and severity. These pressures will be manifest as alterations in temperature, stratification, light, ocean acidification, precipitation-induced nutrient inputs, and grazing, but absence of fundamental knowledge of the mechanisms driving harmful algal blooms frustrates most hope of forecasting their future prevalence. Summarized here is the consensus of a recent workshop held to address what currently is known and not known about the environmental conditions that favor initiation and maintenance of harmful algal blooms. There is expectation that harmful algal bloom (HAB) geographical domains should expand in some cases, as will seasonal windows of opportunity for harmful algal blooms at higher latitudes. Nonetheless there is only basic information to speculate upon which regions or habitats HAB species may be the most resilient or susceptible. Moreover, current research strategies are not well suited to inform these fundamental linkages. There is a critical absence of tenable hypotheses for how climate pressures mechanistically affect HAB species, and the lack of uniform experimental protocols limits the quantitative cross-investigation comparisons essential to advancement. A HAB “best practices” manual would help foster more uniform research strategies and protocols, and selection of a small target list of model HAB species or isolates for study would greatly promote the accumulation of knowledge. Despite the need to focus on keystone species, more studies need to address strain variability within species, their responses under multifactorial conditions, and the retrospective analyses of long-term plankton and cyst core data; research topics that are departures from the norm. Examples of some fundamental unknowns include how larger and more frequent extreme weather events may break down natural biogeographic barriers, how stratification may enhance or diminish HAB events, how trace nutrients (metals, vitamins) influence cell toxicity, and how grazing pressures may leverage, or mitigate HAB development. There is an absence of high quality time-series data in most regions currently experiencing HAB outbreaks, and little if any data from regions expected to develop HAB events in the future. A subset of observer sites is recommended to help develop stronger linkages among global, national, and regional climate change and HAB observation programs, providing fundamental datasets for investigating global changes in the prevalence of harmful algal blooms. Forecasting changes in HAB patterns over the next few decades will depend critically upon considering harmful algal blooms within the competitive context of plankton communities, and linking these insights to ecosystem, oceanographic and climate models. From a broader perspective, the nexus of HAB science and the social sciences of harmful algal blooms is inadequate and prevents quantitative assessment of impacts of future HAB changes on human well-being. These and other fundamental changes in HAB research will be necessary if HAB science is to obtain compelling evidence that climate change has caused alterations in HAB distributions, prevalence or character, and to develop the theoretical, experimental, and empirical evidence explaining the mechanisms underpinning these ecological shifts. DA - 2015-11 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Harmful algal blooms KW - HAB LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2015 SM - 1568-9883 T1 - Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future TI - Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8623 ER - en_ZA


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