School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine, Orono, ME, 04469, USA; State Key Laboratory of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics, Second Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, 36 Baochubei Road, Hangzhou, 310012, China.
SMHI/Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, Forskning & utveckling, oceanografi/Research & development, oceanography, Sven Källfelts gata 15, 426 71 Västra Frölunda, Sweden.
Harmful Algae. 2020 Jan;91:101632. doi: 10.1016/j.hal.2019.101632. Epub 2019 Sep 30.
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.
人们越来越担心,由于人为导致地球变暖而加速的环境变化,可能会极大地改变有害藻类大量繁殖(HAB)的模式、分布和强度。温度变化、海洋酸化、降水、营养物质的压力或可利用性以及水柱的物理结构都会影响浮游植物群落的生产力、组成和全球范围,但对于这些气候驱动因素的综合影响如何塑造未来的 HAB 仍然存在很大的不确定性。本文介绍了一次关于 HAB 和气候变化的专题研讨会的集体审议结果,会上审议了了解 HAB 与气候之间潜在联系的研究挑战,并提出了新的研究方向以更好地确定这些联系。除了物理(温度、盐度、分层、光照、风暴强度变化)、化学(营养物质、海洋酸化)和生物(食草动物)驱动因素对微藻(广义)的可能影响外,专题研讨会的参与者还更广泛地探讨了蓝藻 HAB、底栖 HAB、HAB 对渔业的影响、HAB 模型挑战以及分子方法可以为 HAB 研究带来的贡献。与会者达成共识,除了传统研究外,HAB 科学家还必须制定新的研究计划和实践,以取得预测未来 HAB 趋势所需的概念和定量进展。这些不同的实践包括实验室和现场研究、长期观测计划、回顾性研究,以及对社会经济驱动因素的研究以及与水产养殖和渔业的联系。预计未来 HAB 问题将会增加,因此应优先考虑潜在缓解策略的研究。建议将实验室的大部分 HAB 研究集中在少数 HAB 物种和问题上,以加快我们对这些问题的理解。沿海海洋学和生态系统的气候变化正在变得显著,在某些情况下,由于局部人类活动而加剧。这与全球碳排放量下降缓慢的情况相结合,表明 HAB 科学家有必要加快跨学科努力,为社会提供有关未来 HAB 趋势的必要见解。