4.7 Article

Harmful Algae and Oceanographic Conditions in the Strait of Georgia, Canada Based on Citizen Science Monitoring

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.725092

Keywords

Heterosigma akashiwo; Alexandrium; harmful algae; fish kill; British Columbia; Strait of Georgia; citizen science

Funding

  1. Pacific Salmon Commission
  2. DFO
  3. Ocean Networks Canada

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This study revealed the relationships between harmful algal blooms and environmental factors in the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia, and highlighted the significant interannual and seasonal variations of harmful algae taxa. The findings also showed the impact of harmful algal blooms on local aquaculture facilities and fish farms, emphasizing the importance of long-term data for evaluating the potential role of harmful algae as stressors in the ecosystem.
In British Columbia (BC), harmful algal blooms (HABs) regularly cause severe economic losses through finfish mortalities and shellfish harvest closures due to toxin accumulation, gill damage, or hypoxia. As there is no routine governmental monitoring of HAB phenomena in BC, HAB variability, and its potential links to environmental drivers are not well understood. Here we present results from a well-managed citizen science program which collected an unprecedented 4 year, high-resolution (similar to bi-monthly, similar to 80 stations) dataset of harmful algae (HA) concentrations and corresponding physical and chemical properties of seawater throughout the Strait of Georgia (SoG), BC. Analysis of this dataset revealed statistically significant interannual and seasonal relationships between environmental drivers and the most common HA taxa: Rhizosolenia setigera, Dictyocha spp., Alexandrium spp., Heterosigma akashiwo, Chaetoceros convolutus, and C. concavicornis. HABs exhibited significant interannual variations; specifically, no HABs were found during the summer of 2015, blooms of Dictyocha occurred in 2016 and 2017, and dense blooms of Heterosigma and Noctiluca occurred in 2018. In addition, HA prevalence corresponded with negative effects observed in local aquaculture facilities where higher toxins concentrations (causing Paralytic and Diarrhetic Shellfish Poisonings) in shellfish flesh were detected during years with greater abundance of Alexandrium and Dinophysis. Furthermore, salmon mass mortality at fish farms corresponded to years with high concentrations of Heterosigma and Dictyocha. As such, these results highlight the need for long-term data to evaluate the potential role of HA as a stressor on the SoG ecosystem.

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