Anthropogenic nutrients and harmful algae in coastal waters
HABs
0106 biological sciences
Environmental Engineering
Harmful Algal Bloom
Oceans and Seas
Human health
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
15. Life on land
551
Models, Biological
01 natural sciences
Zooplankton
6. Clean water
Economic impact
13. Climate action
Harmful algal blooms
Anthropogenic nutrients
Animals
Humans
Seasons
14. Life underwater
Waste Management and Disposal
DOI:
10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.07.002
Publication Date:
2014-08-28T04:45:57Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are thought to be increasing in coastal waters worldwide. Anthropogenic nutrient enrichment has been proposed as a principal causative factor of this increase through elevated inorganic and/or organic nutrient concentrations and modified nutrient ratios. We assess: 1) the level of understanding of the link between the amount, form and ratio of anthropogenic nutrients and HABs; 2) the evidence for a link between anthropogenically generated HABs and negative impacts on human health; and 3) the economic implications of anthropogenic nutrient/HAB interactions. We demonstrate that an anthropogenic nutrient-HAB link is far from universal, and where it has been demonstrated, it is most frequently associated with high biomass rather than low biomass (biotoxin producing) HABs. While organic nutrients have been shown to support the growth of a range of HAB species, insufficient evidence exists to clearly establish if these nutrients specifically promote the growth of harmful species in preference to benign ones, or if/how they influence toxicity of harmful species. We conclude that the role of anthropogenic nutrients in promoting HABs is site-specific, with hydrodynamic processes often determining whether blooms occur. We also find a lack of evidence of widespread significant adverse health impacts from anthropogenic nutrient-generated HABs, although this may be partly due to a lack of human/animal health and HAB monitoring. Detailed economic evaluation and cost/benefit analysis of the impact of anthropogenically generated HABs, or nutrient reduction schemes to alleviate them, is also frequently lacking.
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