Is the activity part of, coordinated with, or af4iliated with, other international/regional
programs? Yes: ___ No. ____ If yes, give program title:
8. FUNDING
Has funding been obtained? Yes:
No:
(Prospective) source(s):
9. CONTRIBUTION TO UN DECADE OF OCEAN SCIENCE FOR SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT 2030 AND UN SUSTAINBALE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (UN SDG)
Please speci4ic how the project contributes to Ocean Decade challenges or outcome (https://
www.oceandecade.org) and the UN SDG (https://sdgs.un.org/goals).
Tick one or more if appropriate, refer to Decade Implementation Plan for more information.
UN Ocean Decade
Challenges
Understand and beat marine
pollution
Tick
()
UN Ocean
Decade
Outcomes
A clean Ocean
Tick
()
Tic
k
()
UN SDG
1. No Poverty
GlobalHAB
Protect Scientific
and restore Steering Committee
A healthymembers
and
2. Zero Hunger
Elisa Berdalet
Sustainably feed the global
Institutepopulation
of Marine Sciences, CSIC,
Spain, Chair
Joe Silke
3. Good
health and
Marine Institute, Ireland, IPHAB
wellbeing
ecosystems and biodiversity
Develop a sustainable and
equitable ocean economy
resilient Ocean
Malin Olofsson
A productive
Swedish University
Ocean of Agricultural
Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden
A safe Ocean
representative
4. Quality Education
Clarissa Anderson
Heather Raymond
SouthernUnlock
California
Coastal Ocean
University,
USA
ocean-based
solutionsOhio State An
accessible
Observing
to System
climate change
Ocean
Scripps Institution of Oceanography,
Raffaele Siano
Increase community
An Inspiring and
USA
Ifremer, France
Marc Suddleson
National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
5. Gender
equality
Administration, USA
Neil S. Banas
Expand the global ocean
University
of Strathclyde,
United
observing
system
Kingdom
Susie Wood
Cawthron Institute, New Zealand
Administration,
7. Affordable
and USA, ISSHA and
PICES
representative
clean
energy
Hae Jin Jeong
Seoul National
University, Republic
Skills, knowledge
and
of Koreatechnology for all
University of the Philippines,
Philippines
resilience to ocean hazards
engaging Ocean
Create a digital representation
Aletta Yñiguez
of the ocean
Dave Clarke
Change humanitys
Bengt Karlson
Marine Institute, Ireland, ICES-IOC
relationship with the ocean
Swedish Meteorological and Hydro
Working Group on Harmful Algal
logical Institute, Sweden
Bloom Dynamics representative
Po Teen Lim
University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, Vice-Chair
Raphael Kudela
University of California, Santa Cruz,
USA, GOOS and IPCC representative
6. Clean
and
Vera water
L. Trainer
sanitation
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
8. Decent
and
Henrikwork
Enevoldsen
economic growth
IOC UNESCO/ IOC Science and Communication Centre on Harmful Algae
9. Industry,
at the University
of Copenhagen,
innovation,
and
Infrastructures
Denmark
10. Reduced
inequality
Patricia Miloslavich
Scientific Committee
11. Sustainable
city on Oceanic
esearch, USA
andRcommunity
12. Responsible
Sun Yun
consumption and
Junior Professional Officer, IOC
production
UNESCO/ IOC Secretariat, Paris,
France Change
13. Climate
Authors
Elisa Berdalet, Chair, GlobalHAB SSC, Institute
of Marine Sciences (ICM-CSIC), Barcelona
Henrik Enevoldsen, Head, IOC Science and
Communication Centre on Harmful Algae
University of Copenhagen
Email corresponding author:
berdalet@icm.csic.es
22
14. Life below
waters
15. Life on land
16. Peace, justice,
and strong
institutions
17. Partnership for
the goals
4
HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS NO. 70 / 20221
Harmful Algae News An IOC Newsletter on Toxic Algae and Algal Blooms No. 70 - July 2022 https://hab.ioc-unesco.org/ Mar Menor lagoon: an iconic case of ecosystem collapse Content Featured articles Mar Menor lagoon: an iconic case of ecosystem collapse, Juan M Ruiz, Jaime BernardeauEsteller, M Dolo
nodosa present in Mar Menor at least in the last decades. Caulerpa contains high levels of toxigenic secondary metabolites and contributes loads of labile organic matter to the sediments. Decomposition of this organic matter fuels anoxic processes and increased levels of reduced carbon, nitrogen and
age basin and is a major source of European winter vegetable production. But the transferred water resources, clearly insufficient to sustain such production, had to be complemented with aquifers that had suffered previous overexploitation and became brackish. These brackish aquifers needed treating
Fig. 3. Satellite image (Sentinel 2) after torrential rainfall in September 12th and 13th in the Mar Menor watershed. Tons of terrigenous sediments, carbon, nitrogen and phosphorous are dragged by water runoff from agricultural lands into the Mar Menor lagoon (downloaded from https://www. copernicus
provided by President and Staff of the harbours Club Nautico Lo Pagán, Club Náutico La Puntica and Centro de Actividades Náuticas (San Pedro del Pinatar, Murcia, Spain). References 1. Ruiz JM et al 2020. Informe de asesoramiento técnico del IEO, 165pp 2. Belando MB et al 2019. Front. Mar. Sci. Conf
The Mar Menor Oyster Initiative, a strategy to prevent algal blooms in a eutrophic lagoon in Spain Fig. 1. Map of study in Mar Menor, Murcia, SE Spain Marine ecosystems are exposed to a wide range of pressures including water quality degradation, habitat decline, overfishing and climate change, in
flats, located in the south basin of the lagoon. The rationale of this project is to involve all interested stakeholders for successful large-scale restoration programs, which need public and political support, research, and outreach actions [13]. Acknowledgements Project RemediOS is developed with
Multi-specific Harmful Algal Bloom in a Chilean Fjord: A dangerous phytoplankton cocktail Fig. 1. Maps of study area showing: left, NW Patagonian fjords; right, Quitralco Fjord Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) in Southern Chile (Patagonian fjords) have followed the global trend of increasing reports an
Fig. 3. Vertical distribution of A) temperature (blue line), salinity (red line) and chlorophyll a (green line); B) Pseudo-nitzschia spp; C) A. catenella; D) D. acuminata; E) P. reticulatum at a sampling station close to the head of Quitralco Fjord on February 22, 2022 reticulatum (18.3 x 103 cells
Red Tide Adaptation and Response Network (REARMAR): bridging local, scientific and policy knowledge for smallscale benthic fisheries in the northern Chilean Patagonia Fig. 1. Expansion of Alexandrium catenella-related PSP outbreaks recorded in the last four decades in Chilean Patagonia. Dashed line
l l fishermen leaders and fishery and health authorities were considered inappropriate. Several coordination problems arose when an authorized 6,000 loco landing could not be placed on the market because results of laboratory tests detecting toxins slightly above the regulatory limit (80 ug STX eq
An unprecedented harmful algae bloom in the beaches of Rio, Brazil Fig. 1. Images acquired by Sentinel-3s Ocean and Land Colour Instrument OLCI, on A) November 16th, 2021; B) December 5th, 2021. The dark water patch indicates the algal bloom. Source: Priscila Kienteca Lange, UFRJ An extensive and
Tetraselmis). We speculate that these calm inlets could have possibly been the source of the massive offshore bloom, but further image and data analysis needs to be conducted. The coast of Rio de Janeiro state is subject to coastal upwelling of the South Atlantic Central Water (SACW water mass) at A
High Biomass Bloom of a dinoflagellate (Scrippsiella sp.) in a tropical estuary in northern Bahia State, Northeast Brazil A bloom of Scrippsiella sp. was observed in the Rio Real estuary of Northeast Brazil (Figure 1A; 11o 18 28 S; 37o 16 45 W). According to the KöppenGeiger climate classification [
Limnoraphis robusta bloom in Hanabanilla reservoir, central-southern Cuba Fig. 1. Map showing the areas where the Limnoraphis robusta bloom occurred in Hanabanilla reservoir. Harmful cyanobacterial blooms in freshwater ecosystems can form major water discolorations, threaten ecosystem functioning
from Hanabanilla was mainly in early vegetative stage. In contrast, some morphological characters which are indicators of later growth stage such as red-brownish trichomes and hormogonia were present in high abundance in a previous L. robusta bloom from Hanabanilla reservoir [5]. L. robusta occurred
MixONET, a new SCOR Working Group # 165 on Mixotrophy in the Ocean Traditional and contemporary methods in Biological Oceanography assume a false plant/animal dichotomy for plankton. This dichotomy has been the bedrock of marine science, operationally separating organisms into phototrophic or phagot
Maldonado (Canada), Mengmeng Tong (China), Michaela Larsson (Australia), Patricio Diaz (Chile), Robinson Mugo (Kenya), Tina Šilović (France). The first meeting of the working group was held in silico (February 2022) with the second hybrid meeting scheduled to be held in Baiona (Galicia, Spain) in Ju
GlobalHAB/EuroMarine Workshop on Modelling and Prediction of Harmful Algal Blooms The typical harmful algal bloom 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
Meeting of the GlobalHAB Scientific Steering Committee, Glasgow, Scotland, May 2022 On May 14th -15th, 2022, the Scientific Steering Committee (SSC) of the IOCSCOR programme, GlobalHAB, celebrated its first hybrid meeting in Glasgow, UK, following virtual meetings throughout the Covid19 pandemic. Th
The international community is invited to participate in the GlobalHAB programme, through seeking endorsement of relevant research, monitoring, and modelling activities GlobalHAB APPLICATION FORM FOR ENDORSEMENT OF ACTIVITIES AND PROJECTS To be completed in English and emailed to the Chair of the G
Is the activity part of, coordinated with, or af4iliated with, other international/regional programs? Yes: ___ No. ____ If yes, give program title: 8. FUNDING Has funding been obtained? Yes: No: (Prospective) source(s): 9. CONTRIBUTION TO UN DECADE OF OCEAN SCIENCE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 203
Microbial life cycles Microbial life cycles in a changing ocean in a changing ocean Contributions that address the following topics are welcome: Contributions that address the following topics are welcome: Diversity of microbial life cycles in different habitats and environments Diversity of micr