News Release

International experts weigh-in on harmful algal blooms

Scientists cite nutrient pollution as major force behind increased bloom events

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

Cambridge, Md. – An international group of scientists is linking nutrient pollution in the world's coastal seas to an increase in the number of harmful algal blooms reported in recent years. When harmful algal blooms (HAB's) occur, they taint seafood with toxins, cause human respiratory and skin irritations and cause fish or mammal kills in coastal waters.

In the December edition of the journal Harmful Algae, scientists present a compilation of 21 articles outlining the role of nutrient pollution in the increasing frequency of these events.

"Harmful algal blooms can have direct effects on human health and the environmental balance of our coastal waters," said journal editor and University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science researcher Dr. Patricia Glibert. "By tapping the expertise of many of the world's leading voices on harmful algal blooms, this series of papers hopes to elevate this issue to the forefront of coastal management issues needing immediate attention."

The journal outlines several key issues driving the expansion of HAB's in the United States and the world.

  • Degraded water quality from increased nutrient pollution promotes the development and persistence of many HABs;
  • Understanding the complex relationships between nutrients and the outbreak of harmful algae is key to reducing future blooms; and,
  • New tools for monitoring and predicting these events can help us better understand HAB's.

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This set of synthesis papers is derived in part from a 2005 symposium held in Baltimore, Maryland, sponsored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, as well as more recent research of the past several years. The symposium was part of the Global Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms Program, an international effort to bring scientists together from around the world to compare findings and to advance the capabilities to predict algal blooms. The next symposium on algal blooms and nutrient pollution will be held in October 2009 in Beijing. For more information, visit www.geohab.info.

The University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science is the University System of Maryland's premier environmental research institution. UMCES researchers are helping improve our scientific understanding of Maryland, the region and the world through its three laboratories, Chesapeake Biological Laboratory in Solomons, Appalachian Laboratory in Frostburg, and Horn Point Laboratory in Cambridge, as well as the Maryland Sea Grant College.


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