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Harmful Algal Blooms

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What's the problem?

A harmful algal bloom (HAB) occurs when certain types of microscopic algae grow quickly in water, typically forming visible patches that may harm the health of the environment, plants, or animals. HABs can deplete the oxygen and block the sunlight that other organisms need to live, and some HABs produce toxins that are dangerous to animals, including people.

HABs can occur in marine, estuarine, and fresh waters and can impair drinking and recreational waters. In addition, HAB-associated toxins can contaminate seafood. HABs appear to be increasing in frequency along the coastlines and in the surface waters of the United States according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). These increases are likely responses to an overabundance of nutrients, such as nitrogen from fertilizers, and warmer temperatures associated with climate change.

Who's at risk?

Although scientists do not yet understand fully how many HABs might affect human health, health agencies in the United States and abroad are monitoring HABs and developing guidelines for HAB-related public health action. CDC works with public health agencies, universities, and federal partners to investigate how the following algae, which can cause HABs, may affect public health:

How can you protect yourself from exposure to HABs

To reduce your risk of adverse effects from HABs, you can:

Additionally, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has added certain algae associated with HABs to its Drinking Water Contaminant Candidate List. This list identifies organisms and toxins that EPA believes are priorities for investigation. The public should be aware of the potential threat that algal blooms pose so they can prevent becoming a victim to their effects.

The Bottom Line

Case Example

After long-standing marital difficulties, a husband suggests to his wife that they take a "second honeymoon" together along the southwest Florida coast where he grew up. They fly cross-country and arrive after dark at their romantic seaside hotel. After dinner the husband suggests a moonlight swim. While romantically entangled in the water some distance from the shore, they feel something bumping against them only to discover that they are being surrounded by what seems like thousands of dead fish. The wife panics as she is engulfed by the horrific sight and smell. While struggling to swim to shore, she and her husband begin to wheeze and cough and their eyes begin to sting. The wife has an asthma attack in the deep water and, despite her pleas for help, her husband lets her drown. He swims ashore alone and notifies the authorities of the incident, the resulting symptoms and the disappearance of his wife. The authorities instantly know this is a result of "red tide," a microscopic marine algae called Karenia brevis, that creates blooms making the ocean appear red or brown and that can kill fish and other marine life. When asked if he and his wife had noticed the warning signs on the shore, the husband replies that it had been too dark to see them.

Page last modified on February 18, 2009


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