TY - JOUR
T1 - Controlling harmful algal blooms (HABs) in marine waters
T2 - Review of current status and future prospects
AU - Anderson, Donald M.
AU - Wells, Mark L.
AU - Trainer, Vera L.
AU - Suddleson, Marc
AU - Claridge, Kevin
AU - Coyne, Kathryn J.
AU - Dortch, Quay
AU - Gobler, Christopher J.
AU - Heil, Cynthia A.
AU - Inaba, Nobuharu
AU - Laughinghouse, H. Dail
AU - Mardones, Jorge I.
AU - Nakayama, Natsuko
AU - Park, Taegyu
AU - Peacock, Melissa B.
AU - Pokrzywinski, Kaytee
AU - Raymond, Heather
AU - Toyoda, Jennifer H.
AU - Trethewey, Dean
AU - Visser, Petra M.
AU - Wang, Yanfei
AU - Yuan, Yongquan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - The societal, economic, geographic, and environmental impacts from marine harmful algal blooms (HABs) have increased in many regions around the world. The growing array of impacts is large and varied, threatening human health, marine and freshwater wildlife, and ecosystems upon which many nations rely on for food, recreation, tourism, and a plethora of other goods and services. Although the HAB burden has grown substantially over the past few decades, marine and estuarine HAB control remains one of the least developed areas of HAB science. The disconnect between HAB control needs and solutions stems in part from public, stakeholder, and scientific uncertainties about the balance between benefits and potentially undesirable environmental consequences. Other more practical challenges can include substantial regulation of in situ testing, scaling up laboratory-proven technologies to attack widespread blooms that can move in three dimensions in open marine waters, and an immature commercial market. Here we describe the status of control strategies targeting marine coastal and estuarine HABs, in particular those few approaches that have been tested in mesocosm or field applications. We identify the regulatory support, targeted science, investments, and public outreach that will be needed to accelerate the availability of applications for controlling HABs in marine waters worldwide.
AB - The societal, economic, geographic, and environmental impacts from marine harmful algal blooms (HABs) have increased in many regions around the world. The growing array of impacts is large and varied, threatening human health, marine and freshwater wildlife, and ecosystems upon which many nations rely on for food, recreation, tourism, and a plethora of other goods and services. Although the HAB burden has grown substantially over the past few decades, marine and estuarine HAB control remains one of the least developed areas of HAB science. The disconnect between HAB control needs and solutions stems in part from public, stakeholder, and scientific uncertainties about the balance between benefits and potentially undesirable environmental consequences. Other more practical challenges can include substantial regulation of in situ testing, scaling up laboratory-proven technologies to attack widespread blooms that can move in three dimensions in open marine waters, and an immature commercial market. Here we describe the status of control strategies targeting marine coastal and estuarine HABs, in particular those few approaches that have been tested in mesocosm or field applications. We identify the regulatory support, targeted science, investments, and public outreach that will be needed to accelerate the availability of applications for controlling HABs in marine waters worldwide.
KW - Estuarine
KW - HAB Control
KW - Harmful algal bloom, HAB
KW - Marine
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020780129
U2 - 10.1016/j.hal.2025.102989
DO - 10.1016/j.hal.2025.102989
M3 - Review article
C2 - 41241537
AN - SCOPUS:105020780129
SN - 1568-9883
VL - 150
JO - Harmful Algae
JF - Harmful Algae
M1 - 102989
ER -