Publication | Open Access
Harmful algal blooms and red tide problems on the U.S. west coast
372
Citations
55
References
1997
Year
Harmful MicroalgaeEngineeringOcean PollutionCoastal WaterOceanographyU.s. West CoastRed Tide ProblemsAquacultureMarine PollutionToxicologyAlgal ToxinsEcotoxicologyMarine BiotaSupport BloomsBiologyCoastal ManagementBloom EcologyHarmful Algal BloomsMarine EcologyEnvironmental ToxicologyMarine BiologyEstuaryCoastal Pollution
Along the U.S. west coast, dinoflagellates of the genus Alexandrium cause paralytic shellfish poisoning, diatoms of the genus Pseudo‑nitzschia produce domoic acid, and other species such as Heterosigma akashiwo and Chaetoceros spp. kill fish in aquaculture; nontoxic dinoflagellates also produce red tides, and toxins have been present for centuries but are poorly documented.
On the U.S. west coast, the main toxin‐producing algal species are dinoflagellates in the genus Alexandrium that cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) and diatoms in the genus Pseudo‐nitzschia that produce domoic acid and cause domoic acid poisoning (DAP). Other harmful species, including the raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo and the diatoms Chaetoceros convolutus and Chaetoceros concavicornis, kill fish at aquaculture sites, but are not harmful to humans. Water discolorations (red tides) caused by nontoxic dinoflagellates also occur throughout the area. Early records, partially based on local native lore, suggest that algal toxins have been present along this coast for hundreds of years, but actual scientific information is sparse. We review what is now known about harmful algal blooms in this vast area, including the hydrographic regimes that induce and(or) support blooms, bloom dynamics, and the biology of the causative species.
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