Lakes worldwide experiencing more severe algal blooms: Study
Reports of harmful algal blooms are growing, according to the researchers from Carnegie Institution for Science and NASA in the US. These aquatic phenomena are harmful either because of the intensity of their growth, or because they include popula...

Reports of harmful algal blooms are growing, according to the researchers from Carnegie Institution for Science and NASA in the US.
These aquatic phenomena are harmful either because of the intensity of their growth, or because they include populations of toxin-producing phytoplankton, they said.
However, before this study, published in the journal Nature, it was unclear whether the problem was truly getting worse on a global scale.
The degree to which human activity -- including agriculture, urban development, and climate change -- was contributing to this problem was uncertain, the researchers said.
"Studies indicate that just in the United States, freshwater blooms result in the loss of USD four billion each year," Ho said.
Despite this, studies on freshwater algal blooms have either focused on individual lakes or specific regions, or the period examined was comparatively short.
No long-term global studies of freshwater blooms had been undertaken until now, the researchers said.
To do so, they created a partnership with Google Earth Engine to process and analyse more than 72 billion data points.
"This means that algal blooms really are getting more widespread and more intense, and it's not just that we are paying more attention to them now than we were decades ago," she said.
Although the trend towards more-intense blooms was clear, the reasons for this increase seemed to vary from lake to lake, with no consistent patterns among the lakes where blooms have gotten worse when considering factors such as fertiliser use, rainfall, or temperature, researchers said.
Among the lakes that improved at any point over the 30-year period, only those that experienced the least warming were able to sustain improvements in bloom conditions, the researchers said.
This suggests that climate change is likely already hampering lake recovery in some areas, they said.
"This finding illustrates how important it is to identify the factors that make some lakes more susceptible to climate change," Michalak said.
"We need to develop water management strategies that better reflect the ways that local hydrological conditions are affected by a changing climate," said Michalak
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