TY - JOUR
T1 - Future HAB science
T2 - Directions and challenges in a changing climate
AU - Wells, Mark L.
AU - Karlson, Bengt
AU - Wulff, Angela
AU - Kudela, Raphael
AU - Trick, Charles
AU - Asnaghi, Valentina
AU - Berdalet, Elisa
AU - Cochlan, William
AU - Davidson, Keith
AU - De Rijcke, Maarten
AU - Dutkiewicz, Stephanie
AU - Hallegraeff, Gustaaf
AU - Flynn, Kevin J.
AU - Legrand, Catherine
AU - Paerl, Hans
AU - Silke, Joe
AU - Suikkanen, Sanna
AU - Thompson, Peter
AU - Trainer, Vera L.
N1 - © 2019 The Authors.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - There is increasing concern that accelerating environmental change attributed to human-induced warming of the planet may substantially alter the patterns, distribution and intensity of Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs). Changes in temperature, ocean acidification, precipitation, nutrient stress or availability, and the physical structure of the water column all influence the productivity, composition, and global range of phytoplankton assemblages, but large uncertainty remains about how integration of these climate drivers might shape future HABs. Presented here are the collective deliberations from a symposium on HABs and climate change where the research challenges to understanding potential linkages between HABs and climate were considered, along with new research directions to better define these linkages. In addition to the likely effects of physical (temperature, salinity, stratification, light, changing storm intensity), chemical (nutrients, ocean acidification), and biological (grazer) drivers on microalgae (senso lato), symposium participants explored more broadly the subjects of cyanobacterial HABs, benthic HABs, HAB effects on fisheries, HAB modelling challenges, and the contributions that molecular approaches can bring to HAB studies. There was consensus that alongside traditional research, HAB scientists must set new courses of research and practices to deliver the conceptual and quantitative advances required to forecast future HAB trends. These different practices encompass laboratory and field studies, long-term observational programs, retrospectives, as well as the study of socioeconomic drivers and linkages with aquaculture and fisheries. In anticipation of growing HAB problems, research on potential mitigation strategies should be a priority. It is recommended that a substantial portion of HAB research among laboratories be directed collectively at a small sub-set of HAB species and questions in order to fast-track advances in our understanding. Climate-driven changes in coastal oceanographic and ecological systems are becoming substantial, in some cases exacerbated by localized human activities. That, combined with the slow pace of decreasing global carbon emissions, signals the urgency for HAB scientists to accelerate efforts across disciplines to provide society with the necessary insights regarding future HAB trends.
AB - There is increasing concern that accelerating environmental change attributed to human-induced warming of the planet may substantially alter the patterns, distribution and intensity of Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs). Changes in temperature, ocean acidification, precipitation, nutrient stress or availability, and the physical structure of the water column all influence the productivity, composition, and global range of phytoplankton assemblages, but large uncertainty remains about how integration of these climate drivers might shape future HABs. Presented here are the collective deliberations from a symposium on HABs and climate change where the research challenges to understanding potential linkages between HABs and climate were considered, along with new research directions to better define these linkages. In addition to the likely effects of physical (temperature, salinity, stratification, light, changing storm intensity), chemical (nutrients, ocean acidification), and biological (grazer) drivers on microalgae (senso lato), symposium participants explored more broadly the subjects of cyanobacterial HABs, benthic HABs, HAB effects on fisheries, HAB modelling challenges, and the contributions that molecular approaches can bring to HAB studies. There was consensus that alongside traditional research, HAB scientists must set new courses of research and practices to deliver the conceptual and quantitative advances required to forecast future HAB trends. These different practices encompass laboratory and field studies, long-term observational programs, retrospectives, as well as the study of socioeconomic drivers and linkages with aquaculture and fisheries. In anticipation of growing HAB problems, research on potential mitigation strategies should be a priority. It is recommended that a substantial portion of HAB research among laboratories be directed collectively at a small sub-set of HAB species and questions in order to fast-track advances in our understanding. Climate-driven changes in coastal oceanographic and ecological systems are becoming substantial, in some cases exacerbated by localized human activities. That, combined with the slow pace of decreasing global carbon emissions, signals the urgency for HAB scientists to accelerate efforts across disciplines to provide society with the necessary insights regarding future HAB trends.
KW - Aquaculture
KW - Benthic
KW - Climate change
KW - Cyanobacteria
KW - Experimental strategies
KW - Fisheries
KW - Grazing
KW - HAB
KW - Modeling
KW - Multi-stressor
KW - New tools
KW - Nutrients
KW - Observatories
KW - Ocean acidification
KW - Stratification
KW - Temperature
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/7b6c2965-8a13-3f08-bf25-a6ea57421ba9/
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85072695609&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85072695609&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.hal.2019.101632
DO - 10.1016/j.hal.2019.101632
M3 - Article
SN - 1568-9883
VL - 91
JO - Harmful Algae
JF - Harmful Algae
M1 - 101632
ER -