Abstract

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are diverse phenomena involving multiple. species and classes of algae that occupy a broad range of habitats from lakes to oceans and produce a multiplicity of toxins or bioactive compounds that impact many different resources. Here, a review of the status of this complex array of marine HAB problems in the U.S. is presented, providing historical information and trends as well as future perspectives. The study relies on thirty years (1990-2019) of data in HAEDAT - the IOC-ICES-PICES Harmful Algal Event database, but also includes many other reports. At a qualitative level, the U.S. national HAB problem is far more extensive than was the case decades ago, with more toxic species and toxins to monitor, as well as a larger range of impacted resources and areas affected. Quantitatively, no significant trend is seen for paralytic shellfish toxin (PST) events over the study interval, though there is clear evidence of the expansion of the problem into new regions and the emergence of a species that produces PSTs in Florida - Pyrodinium bahamense. Amnesic shellfish toxin (AST) events have significantly increased in the U.S., with an overall pattern of frequent outbreaks on the West Coast, emerging, recurring outbreaks on the East Coast, and sporadic incidents in the Gulf of Mexico. Despite the long historical record of neurotoxic shellfish toxin (NST) events, no significant trend is observed over the past 30 years. The recent emergence of diarrhetic shellfish toxins (DSTs) in the U.S. began along the Gulf Coast in 2008 and expanded to the West and East Coasts, though no significant trend through time is seen since then. Ciguatoxin (CTX) events caused by Gambierdiscus dinoflagellates have long impacted tropical and subtropical locations in the U.S., but due to a lack of monitoring programs as well as under-reporting of illnesses, data on these events are not available for time series analysis. Geographic expansion of Gambierdiscus into temperate and non-endemic areas (e.g., northern Gulf of Mexico) is apparent, and fostered by ocean warming. HAB-related marine wildlife morbidity and mortality events appear to be increasing, with statistically significant increasing trends observed in marine mammal poisonings caused by ASTs along the coast of California and NSTs in Florida. Since their first occurrence in 1985 in New York, brown tides resulting from high-density blooms of Aureococcus have spread south to Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia, while those caused by Aureoumbra have spread from the Gulf Coast to the east coast of Florida. Blooms of Margalefidinium polykrikoides occurred in four locations in the U.S. from 1921-2001 but have appeared in more than 15 U.S. estuaries since then, with ocean warming implicated as a causative factor. Numerous blooms of toxic cyanobacteria have been documented in all 50 U.S. states and the transport of cyanotoxins from freshwater systems into marine coastal waters is a recently identified and potentially significant threat to public and ecosystem health. Taken together, there is a significant increasing trend in all HAB events in HAEDAT over the 30-year study interval. Part of this observed HAB expansion simply reflects a better realization of the true or historic scale of the problem, long obscured by inadequate monitoring. Other contributing factors include the dispersion of species to new areas, the discovery of new HAB poisoning syndromes or impacts, and the stimulatory effects of human activities like nutrient pollution, aquaculture expansion, and ocean warming, among others. One result of this multifaceted expansion is that many regions of the U.S. now face a daunting diversity of species and toxins, representing a significant and growing challenge to resource managers and public health officials in terms of toxins, regions, and time intervals to monitor, and necessitating new approaches to monitoring and management. Mobilization of funding and resources for research, monitoring and management of HABs requires accurate information on the scale and nature of the national problem. HAEDAT and other databases can be of great value in this regard but efforts are needed to expand and sustain the collection of data regionally and nationally.

Highlights

  • Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are a significant problem in U.S coastal waters, dating back hundreds of years to when explorers and early west-coast settlers were poisoned from what we know were toxins in the seafood they consumed (e.g., Fortuine 1975)

  • A small number of freshwater cyanobacterial events have been entered in the HAEDAT dataset for the U.S, but the vast majority are for events that affect estuarine or coastal marine waters

  • This review will refer to the toxins (e.g., paralytic shellfish toxin (PST), diarrhetic shellfish toxins (DSTs), neurotoxic shellfish toxin (NST), Amnesic shellfish toxin (AST) and AZTs) rather than the syndromes because the HAEDAT records are of toxin concentrations above regulatory concentrations2 and not human poisonings

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Summary

Introduction

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are a significant problem in U.S coastal waters, dating back hundreds of years to when explorers and early west-coast settlers were poisoned from what we know were toxins in the seafood they consumed (e.g., Fortuine 1975). Brief summaries of the key drivers for bloom dynamics are presented as well This compilation of information is of value to assist in current management strategies for fisheries, tourism, human health and other impacted sectors, but it will provide the baseline against which future changes can be assessed, those associated with climate change, nutrient pollution, and other global trends. A small number of freshwater cyanobacterial events have been entered in the HAEDAT dataset for the U.S, but the vast majority are for events that affect estuarine or coastal marine waters Even those records are limited in coverage, so this review only uses peer-reviewed literature to discuss cyanoHAB problems in coastal waters. To assess changes over time in the geographical extent of bloom events, for each of the toxin families associated with a human poisoning syndrome (PSTs, ASTs, DSTs, and NSTs), a linear logistic regression

Methods
Other impacts
NSTs and Karenia brevis in the Gulf of Mexico
CTX and CP
Brown tides
Heterosigma
Karenia mikimotoi
Effects of other marine HABs on fish and wildlife
Cyanobacteria
Conclusions
Trends for individual toxin families or HAB species
Findings
All HABs combined
Full Text
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