Three decades of Canadian marine harmful algal events: Phytoplankton and phycotoxins of concern to human and ecosystem health

•Harmful algal events occur annually on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Canada.•PST events are the most reported HAEDAT events on both Atlantic and Pacific coasts.•Harmful algal related fish kills have occurred on both coast but are more common on the Pacific coast.•In Canada harmful algae h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Harmful algae 2021-02, Vol.102, p.101852, Article 101852
Hauptverfasser: McKenzie, Cynthia H., Bates, Stephen S., Martin, Jennifer L., Haigh, Nicola, Howland, Kimberly L., Lewis, Nancy I., Locke, Andrea, Peña, Angelica, Poulin, Michel, Rochon, André, Rourke, Wade A., Scarratt, Michael G., Starr, Michel, Wells, Terri
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Harmful algal events occur annually on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Canada.•PST events are the most reported HAEDAT events on both Atlantic and Pacific coasts.•Harmful algal related fish kills have occurred on both coast but are more common on the Pacific coast.•In Canada harmful algae have negatively impacted humans, fish and other marine life.•Potentially harmful algal species are widespread throughout the Canadian arctic. Spatial and temporal trends of marine harmful algal events in Canada over the last three decades were examined using data from the Harmful Algal Event Database (HAEDAT). This database contains the most complete record of algal blooms, phycotoxins and shellfish harvesting area closures in Canada since 1987. This 30-year review of 593 Canadian HAEDAT records from 1988 to 2017, together with other Canadian data and publications, shows that recurring harmful algal events have been widespread throughout both the Atlantic and Pacific coastal regions. The 367 paralytic shellfish toxin (PST) reports revealed annual and frequent recurrence throughout both the Atlantic and Pacific regions, including multi-year PST events in the Bay of Fundy, the Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Strait of Georgia. The 70 amnesic shellfish toxin (AST) records revealed no recognizable trend, as these events were usually area specific and did not recur annually. The increasing frequency of diarrhetic shellfish toxin (DST) events over the period of this review, in total 59 records, can be at least partially explained by increased sampling effort. Marine species mortalities caused by harmful algae (including diatoms, dictyochophytes, dinoflagellates, and raphidophytes), were a common occurrence in the Pacific region (87 reports), but have been reported much less frequently in the Atlantic region (10 reports). Notable Canadian records contained in HAEDAT include the first detection worldwide of amnesic shellfish poisoning (ASP), attributed to the production of domoic acid (an AST) by a diatom (Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries) in Prince Edward Island in 1987. The first proven case of diarrhetic shellfish poisoning (DSP) in Canada and North America was recorded in 1990, and the first closures of shellfish harvesting due to DST (associated with the presence of Dinophysis norvegica) occurred in Nova Scotia in 1992, followed by closures in Newfoundland and Labrador in 1993. In 2008, mass mortalities of fishes, birds and mammals in the St. Lawrence Estuary w
ISSN:1568-9883
1878-1470
DOI:10.1016/j.hal.2020.101852