NEW!! Harmful Algal Blooms
(HABs) and Desalination: A
Guide to Impacts, Monitoring,
and Management
Manuals and Guides
78
Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs)
and Desalination: A Guide to
Impacts, Monitoring, and Management
Fig. 3. Sargassum accumulation as a thick mat on the nesting beach
Edited by:
Donald M. Anderson, Siobhan F.E. Boerlage, Mike B. Dixon
UNESCO
Fig. 4. A baby turtle struggling to find its way through the Sargassum mat
References
1. Hoffmayer ER et al 2005. Gulf Caribb
Fisheries Institute 56: 264-269
2. Milledge JJ & PJ Harvey 2016. J Mar Sci
Eng. 4: 60. doi:10.3390/jmse4030060
3. Johnson DR et al 2013. Proc 65th GCFI
2013:102-103
4. Smetacek V & A Zingone 2013. Nature
504: 84-88
5. Gavio B et al 2015. Acta Biol Colomb
20: 239-241 DOI: 10.15446/abc.
v20n1.46109
6. Louime C et al 2017. Am J Env Sci 13: 5864
7. López CB et al 2008. Scientific assessment of Marine Harmful Algal Blooms.
Interagency Working Group on Harmful Algal Blooms, Hypoxia and Human
Health of the Joint Subcommittee on
HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS NO. 58 / 2017
Ocean Science and Technology. Washington, D.C.
8. Maurer AS et al 2015. Front Ecol Envir
Nat Hist Notes 13 (7): 394395
9. Azanza-Ricardo J & R Pérez-Martín
2016. Rev Investig Mar 36 (1): 54-62
10. Cruz-Rivera E et al 2015. Bull Mar Sci
-Miami- 91. 10.5343/bms.2015.1048
Authors
Brigitte Gavio,Universidad Nacional de
Colombia, sede Bogotá, Biology Department, Bogotá, Colombia
Adriana Santos-Martinez, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, sede Caribe, San Louis
Free Town, San Andrés Island, Colombia
UNESCOs Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission has launched the
first ever guidebook on the growing
problem HABs pose to seawater desalination plants. The launch took place last
October at the International Desalination Association World Congress in São
Paulo Brazil.
This guidebook is published to help
the desalination industry tackle an issue that represents a potential threat
both to human health and to the distribution of desalinated water on which
an increasing number of arid countries
rely for their fresh water needs.
The 517-page manual is a groundbreaking achievement built on the cooperation of 63 HAB and desalination
industry specialists from multiple disciplines, some of which had rarely interacted in the past.
The publication was sponsored by
the Middle East Desalination Research
Center (MEDRC), the United States
Agency for International Development
(USAID) and the IOC of UNESCO. It was
edited by Don Anderson, Siobhan Boerlage and Mike Dixon.
Copies of the manual can be ordered
online at http://www.ioc-unesco.org/
HAB-desalination
Email corresponding autor: bgavio@unal.
edu.co
5
Harmful Algae News An IOC Newsletter on Toxic Algae and Algal Blooms No. 58 - November 2017 www.ioc-unesco.org/hab Call to Contribute to Global Harmful Algal Bloom Status Reporting From 25 to 28 September 2017 sixteen HAB experts from 13 countries gathered at the headquarters of the IOC IODE (Inte
the first of which will be launched in Nantes. Follow the development of the Global HAB Status Report at http://haedat. iode.org/ and see who is involved and how you may engage. Acknowledgements We thank Ward Appeltans and Pieter Provoost at the IOC/IODE Project Office for hospitality and technical
PSP# # # # # # DSP# # # # # # AZP# ! ! ! Fig. 4. Maps showing the incidence of PSP, DSP and AZP during the period 2014 to 2016 in the North Atlantic as reported by the ICES-IOC WG HABD. Areas such as Northern Canada and Greenland are not routinely sampled and countries with pink borders have sti
Pelagic Sargassum reaching Serranilla Bank, Caribbean Colombia, may pose a risk to baby turtles Fig. 1. Location of Serranilla Bank in the Caribbean Sea (Photo Wikipedia) Floating Sargassum has been known from centuries to occur in the Atlantic Ocean, in a region named the Sargasso Sea. Floating S
NEW!! Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and Desalination: A Guide to Impacts, Monitoring, and Management Manuals and Guides 78 Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and Desalination: A Guide to Impacts, Monitoring, and Management Fig. 3. Sargassum accumulation as a thick mat on the nesting beach Edited by: Dona
A red tide event associated with the dinoflagellate Karenia mikimotoi in the Firth of Clyde, Scotland Fig. 1. Maximum abundance of K. mikimotoi by month and year for monitoring sites in Scottish coastal waters. The densest bloom observed exceeded 4 million cells per litre in July 2016. The potenti
Fig. 5. Theoretical effect of the K. mikimotoi bloom on background dissolved oxygen concentration (black horizontal dashed line: Firth of Clyde summer averaged SEPA data 2005-2015). Cell density was sufficient to cause hypoxia on 3 occasions at 4.59mg L-1[8] or once at 2mg L-1 (grey dashed lines). A
First evidence of high saxitoxin concentration in Crassostrea iridiscens associated with Gymnodinium catenatum blooms at Banderas Bay, Jalisco México Fig. 1. Location of sampling stations in Banderas Bay Jalisco México during Gymnodinium catenatum bloom from March to June of 2017. Banderas Bay has
Fig. 2. High saxitoxin concentration in Crassostrea iridiscens associated with Gymnodinium catenatum blooms in Banderas Bay, Jalisco México. Fig. 4. Micrographs of live cells of Gymnodinium catenatum from Banderas Bay at 400x (a) and 200x (b); Seawater discoloration due to a G. catenatum patch duri
ICES-IOC Working Group on Harmful Algal Blooms Dynamics The report of the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) and Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO (IOC) Working Group on Harmful Algal Bloom Dy namics (ICES-IOC WGHABD) is now available on the ICES website (
SEAFDEC-MFRD Regional Training Course in Malaysia Harmful algal blooms (HAB) and their socio-economic impacts are recognized internationally due to the negative impacts from HABs on the the coastal ecosystem, safety and security of food and drinking water, and human health hazards. Some incidents an
Forthcoming events Workshop on morpho-molecular methods for the study of dinoflagellate cysts ICES-IOC-IMO Working Group on Ballast and Other Ship Vectors 5-7 March 2018 Monday 12th and Tuesday 13th February 2018 Location: Cawthron Institute, 98 Halifax Street East, Nelson 7010, New Zealand Organi
the 18th international conference on harmful algae from ecosystems to socio-ecosystems SAVE the date! FATMA GUELLATI/UPMC-UNIV BADJI MOKHTAR Minyvel Environnement/Phenomer Nicolas Chomérat/IFREmer Véronique Séchet/IFREmer Olivier BARBAROUX/IFREmer Stéphane LESBATS/IFREmer Olivier DUG
Rex Munday in Memoriam Dr Rex Munday, an internationally renowned toxicologist, sadly passed away on the 20th July this year. His wife Christine, daughter Sarah (Finch) and son John were with him. Rex published with all his family at different times, an example being the paper Munday, Munday and Mun
Rex Mundays HAB research highlights Discovery of Tetrodotoxin in grey side-gilled sea slugs: Rex had a sharp wit, best illustrated with an anecdote from 2013. We had collected hundreds of samples to explain why dogs were dying on Auckland beaches and sent twelve to Rex for toxicity screening using l
! Oostende OBIS/HAEDAT training workshop participants. Eds-in-chief Beatriz Reguera, IEO, Vigo, Spain Eilen Bresnan, MARLAB, Scotland, UK Regional Editors Caribbean: Ernesto Mancera jemancerap@unal.edu.co Europe: Philip Hess Philipp.Hess@ifremer.fr India: K.B. Padmakumar kbpadmakumar@gmail.c