Forthcoming events
Call for abstracts - ICHA 2020
The Organizing Committee is pleased to announce the
call for abstracts and pre-registration for the 19th International Conference on Harmful Algal Blooms to be held
from the 11th to the 16th of October 2020 in La Paz, Baja
California Sur, Mexico. La Paz is a small, secure and vibrant maritime city where many scientific institutions are
situated an ideal city for the meeting!
The organizing committee invites the submission of
abstracts within a broad range of topics related to the
study of harmful algae from basic studies to future ap-
plications. For the full list of topics, please visit the conference website (icha2020.com/Secciones/contenido/33).
The deadline for submitting an abstract for a poster,
speed-talk or oral presentation is the 12th of April 2020.
All abstracts must be submitted at the conference website
(icha2020.com/Secciones/contenido/35).
Participants wishing to receive the ISSHA member rate
for the conference registration must join ISSHA or renew
their memberships prior to 12th of June 2020.
A visa may be required for participants from some
countries. Please check visa regulations well in advance
with your local Mexican Embassy or Consulate for official
instructions on the specific visa regulations and application procedures.
As the main host of the conference, ISSHA will support student travel awards, achievement awards, and the
popular ISSHA auction!
Modeling and Prediction of Harmful Algal Blooms:
Emerging Methods, Regional Problem-solving, and Patterns of Global Change
IOC-SCOR GlobalHAB and EuroMarine are pleased to announce this international workshop to be held in Glasgow,
Scotland, 18-21 May 2020.
The typical HAB is a regional- or local-scale phenomenon,
a perfect storm of environmental conditions, ocean transport and mixing patterns, and microbial ecology. Because of
this complexity, prediction of HABs is a grand challenge that
requires multidisciplinary dialogue among physical scientists, biologists, computer modellers, and technologists, as
well as community stakeholders and the government and
industry end-users of prediction systems.
This 3.5-day workshop will combine oral and poster
presentations, round-table discussions, and tutorials in order to:
Increase awareness of the range of modelling and observational tools that are in our community toolbox (or
should be);
Help the HAB community speak with one voice regarding climate-change impacts on the global ocean; and
Help scientists and technologists develop creative approaches to meeting the needs of coastal communities,
governments, and industry worldwide.
Hands-on tutorials will include Getting started with... sessions on remote-sensing data, machine-learning approaches,
global climate model output, and dynamical plankton models, with presenters including Clarissa Anderson, (SCCOOS/
HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS NO. 63 / 2019
Scripps, USA), Raphael Kudela (UC Santa Cruz, USA), Charles
Stock (NOAA GFDL, USA), and Androniki Tamvakis (University of the Aegean, Greece).
Abstract submission is open through 15 Dec 2019 at habmodelworkshop.sccoos.org, for presentations and facilitated discussions in the areas of:
1. Regional problem-solving: linking models, observations, and stakeholder needs
2. Emerging approaches and technologies: physical and
ecological model methods and observational capacities
that open up new directions in HAB prediction
3. Global patterns and global change: links between HABs
and environmental drivers at large spatial scales and
on long time horizons
4. Scalable solutions: applications of global models, remote sensing, and other communal resources to predicting HABs and managing their impacts in data- and
resource-poor systems
We particularly invite scientists outside North America and
Europe, and early-career scientists in general, to propose
discussion topics and get involved in facilitating the meeting. Funding is available to cover travel costs for a subset
of participants, with the goal of increasing international and
career-stage diversity as much as possible.
21
Harmful Algae News An IOC Newsletter on Toxic Algae and Algal Blooms No. 63 - December 2019 www.ioc-unesco.org/hab Harmful Algal Blooms in a Changing Climate In September 2019 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) approved and accepted the Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere
New Initiative on Fish-Killing Algal Blooms An Advanced International Colloquium and Technical Workshop on Fish-Killing HABs under the auspices of IOC-IPHAB and GlobalHAB, and with the support of the government of Chile through CORFO and collaboration of CREAN-IFOP, was held in Puerto Varas, Chile,
IOC-SCOR GlobalHAB Workshop: Evaluating, Reducing and Mitigating the Cost of Harmful Algal Blooms: a Compendium of Case Studies Over the last two decades, several reports have compiled what is known about the economic impacts of harmful algal blooms (HABs) [1-4]. Although these reports attempted to
Several examples of HAB-related losses and loss mitigation were discussed at the workshop in detail. A HAB incident in northern Norway alone resulted in the loss of 14 thousand tons of Atlantic salmon in May 2019, resulting in a total loss of at least 330 million USD, including insured losses of 45
Massive fish mortality in Teluk Bahang, Penang, Malaysia caused by a hypoxia-inducing algal bloom Fish kill events due to algal blooms have been increased dramatically over the past decades. Several massive fish kill events have been reported in Malaysia [1-5]. Among the incidents reported, some are
Blooms of the potentially harmful raphidophyte Chattonella antiqua and the occurrence of the epiphytic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata in the coastal waters of Alexandria, Egypt coastal marine areas. Blooms of this genus are usually accompanied by goldenbrown seawater discoloration due to their
Table 1. Seawater physical and chemical parameters during the summer 2019 Chattonella bloom mg O2/L Nutrient concentration μM C Salinit y pH DO COD PO4 SiO4 NO2 NO3 NH4 35.00 17.8 8.64 6.3 22.5 13.35 58 12.6 20.6 45.2 TN SiO4 PO4 Table 2. Physical and chemical properties of
First records of Gambierdiscus excentricus and Ostreopsis lenticularis in the Cape Verde Archipelago (Macaronesia, Central Eastern Atlanctic) Fig. 1. Map of Cape Verde archipelago (Macaronesia Region). Harmful algal blooms (HAB) species frequently recorded in tropical latitudes are apparently incr
Fig. 3. Gambierdiscus excentricus. Scanning electron micrographs, apical and ventral views mostly on the left side of the cell. The second apical plate (2) was narrow and elongated, and located below the APC, extending dorsally to the Po plate, and reaching about the mid-position of the 3 plate. Pl
Microcystis bloom in Saladito river, central-southern Cuba Fig. 1. Map showing the cyanobacterial bloom area in Saladito River, central-southern Cuba. Water blooms or simply blooms in freshwater reservoirs are mass accumulations of planktonic microalgae or cyanobacteria. Water blooms (Wasserblüte)
the center of the colony; a few solitary cells may appear in the mucilage. In our populations the typical solitary cells in mucilage were not observed, neither the concentrically lamellated margins. It is possible that the Cuban specimens could be identified as M. panniformis or M. novacekii, but fu
Citizen Science Oceanography in the Strait of Georgia, Canada an overview of five years of operations The Citizen Science Oceanography Program for the coastal waters of British Columbia (BC), Canada was proposed by Dr. Eddy Carmack, Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO). Carmack envisioned a mosquito f
harm (e.g. fish kills, shellfish poisoning) at very low concentrations. In the latter case, they are still called blooms because of their effects. These types of blooms can be invisible to the naked eye and only in-situ sampling can detect them. During five years of observations, the heaviest blooms
Multicoloured algal blooms in the NW Adriatic during 2018 The northern Adriatic is characterized by shallow waters (mean depth about 35 m), a weak bathymetric gradient along the main axis and a high riverine input on the western side, affecting both the circulation regime and the trophic status. As
Fig. 4. A bloom of an unidentified gymnodinioid caused a brown-greenish discoloration. Fig. 6. Ostreopsis cf. ovata bloom causing bleaching of macroalgal thalli. Fig. 5. Green colored waters from a mixed bloom of diatoms and Prorocentrum cordatum. Fig. 7. Field sample showing Takayama tasmanica a
A bloom of Prorocentrum triestinum in the Hossegor Marine Lake (France) Phytoplankton communities in the Hossegor marine lake (Southern French Atlantic coast, Fig. 1) have been monthly monitored since 1997 to protect human health (REPHY network: monitoring of toxin producing species which may contam
The ICES Annual Science Conference 2019 The International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) annual science conference took place in Gothenburg, Sweden, 9-12th Sept 2019 with 738 participants from 38 countries attending. The conference opened with a lively panel discussion around sustaina
11th Irish Shellfish Safety Workshop At the 11th Shellfish Safety Workshop held in the Radisson Blu Hotel Athlone, Ireland, Joe Silke, Director of Marine Environment and Food Safety Services at the Marine Institute said, Irelands Shellfish Safety Monitoring Programme ensures that shellfish placed on
Fig. 2. Oyster Farm. Photo courtesy of Fionn OFearghail, Marine Institute Marine Institute The Marine Institute is the state agency responsible for marine research, technology development and innovation in Ireland. The Marine Institute provides government, public agencies and the maritime industry
The 33rd annual meeting of the Australasian Society for Phycology and Aquatic Botany (ASPAB) The 33rd annual ASPAB meeting was held at NIWAs Greta Point site in Wellington, New Zealand on 11-13 November 2019. This year most presentations were on macroalgae although in the past microalgae and HABs ha
Forthcoming events Call for abstracts - ICHA 2020 The Organizing Committee is pleased to announce the call for abstracts and pre-registration for the 19th International Conference on Harmful Algal Blooms to be held from the 11th to the 16th of October 2020 in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico. La
12th International Conference on Modern and Fossil Dinoflagellates The Canarian HABs Observatory (OCH) hosts the 12th edition of the International Conference on Modern and Fossil Dinoflagellates (DINO12), to be held from 13th to 17th July 2020 at the Alfredo Kraus Auditorium in Las Canteras beach, L