Image courtesy of Australian Associated Press/Alamy
Joel Kontinen
Algae bloom poses a great problem in Australia. It is killing
fish.
Over the
past eight months, a vast and deadly algal bloom in South Australia has ravaged
over 20,000 square kilometres of the marine environment, killed an estimated 1
million animals from more than great 550 species and had widespread impacts on human health.
Now,
researchers have finally identified the species behind the ecological disaster,
and they warn that it represents an “emerging international threat with unknown
consequences”.
The culprit
is an algal species named Karenia cristata, which has only previously been
reported in two locations near South Africa, where it caused fish die-offs in
1989 and again the mid-1990s, as well as off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.
James Woodford 2025 Toxic algae blighting South Australia could pose a global threat | New Scientist 5 November