Red and green waters in southern B
rittany (France) in March
2026 linked to a bloom of Mesodinium spp.
Fig. 1. Map of reported water discoloration events in southern Brittany (1012 March 2026) based on PHENOMER observations and direct reports.
Locations include the Bay of Audierne and the Bay of Concarneau.
Between 10 and 12 March 2026, multiple observations of discoloured seawater were reported along the southern
coast of Brittany (France), particularly
in the Bay of Audierne and the Bay of
Concarneau. A total of eleven reports
were collected through the citizen observatory Phenomer [12] and direct
communications, describing both red
(wine-red) and green water patches
[3]. The spatial clustering and rapid
succession of these observations indicated a regional-scale bloom event affecting several coastal sectors of southern Finistère (Fig. 1).
The red water in Concarneau and
the green water in La Torche were sampled on 11 March 2026 and analysed
using inverted light microscopy on
fresh material. The red water observed
in the port of Concarneau corresponded
to a dense bloom of the Mesodinium rubrum/Mesodinium major complex [4],
with an abundance of at least 4.4106
cellsL-1 [3]. This planktonic ciliate is
well known for forming intense red
tides, resulting from the retention of
cryptophyte-derived
kleptoplastids;
depending on the ingested prey species, these plastids may be rich in phy-
Fig. 2. (A) Red wine-coloured water associated with a Mesodinium spp. bloom in Concarneau
Harbour (12 March 2026). (B) Green discoloured water at La Torche (11 March 2026), corresponding to a post-bloom stage with degraded cells and organic material.
14
coerythrin (yielding a red coloration)
or lack phycoerythrin and appear green
(e.g., following ingestion of Hemiselmis
spp.) [57]. In the analysed sample,
other phytoplankton groups, including
diatoms and dinoflagellates, were present only in low abundances. Among
these, the non-toxic dinoflagellate
Scrippsiella spp. had previously been
recorded at moderate concentrations
(3.6104 cellsL1) in the area during
observations of the French phytoplankton observation and monitoring program (REPHY [11]) suggesting that the
discoloration was not associated with
a typical harmful dinoflagellate bloom
(Fig. 2A, Fig. 4).
Green discoloration events, notably
observed at La Torche (Audierne Bay),
showed distinct characteristics, including foam formation and occasional
unpleasant odours [3]. Microscopy revealed large amounts of degraded organic material and weakened or lysed
Mesodinium cells. These observations
indicate that the green waters represent a post-bloom stage following the
collapse of Mesodinium populations.
The rapid shift from red to green coloration is explained by pigment dynamics
during cell degradation: phycoerythrin is rapidly degraded after cell lysis,
revealing chlorophylls a and c2, which
HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS NO. 83 / 2026
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Red and green waters in southern B rittany (France) in March 2026 linked to a bloom of Mesodinium spp. Fig. 1. Map of reported water discoloration events in southern Brittany (1012 March 2026) based on PHENOMER observations and direct reports. Locations include the Bay of Audierne and the Bay of C
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