My co-author and I are pleased to note the availability of a publication on
the 'Co-occurrence of harmful algal blooms and whale deaths.'

Silber, G.K. and K.M. Silber. 2024. Co-occurrence of Harmful Algal Blooms
and
whale deaths. Frontiers in Marine Science 11:1454656. doi:
10.3389/fmars.2024.1454656

Abstract

Marine harmful algal blooms (HAB) have been implicated in marine mammal
die-offs; but the relationship between sub-lethal algal toxicity and marine
mammal vulnerability to human activities has not been assessed. HAB toxins
can result in compromised neurological or muscular systems and we posit
these conditions can expose marine mammals to increased likelihood of
entanglement in commercial fishing gear or ship strike. To investigate
whether HABs and large whale injuries and deaths were associated, we
assessed the spatiotemporal co-occurrence of HAB events and large whale
mortalities/injuries in U.S. east (from 2000-2021) and west (2007-2021)
coastal waters. The number of mortalities/injuries was frequently higher in
years with large-scale or severe HABs. We found statistically significant
relationships between the occurrence of HABs and whale mortalities/injuries
in west coast waters – at least three additional whale deaths/injuries were
detected near an active HAB than in areas where a HAB was not reported.
This relationship was similarly positive but weaker for east coast waters,
a difference that may be attributable to differing oceanographic features,
or approaches used in whale data collection, between coasts.
Saxitoxin-producing Alexandrium was the most common causative agent on both
the east (64.1%) and west (57.8%) coasts; and domoic acid-producing
Pseudo-nitzschia was more common along the west (33.3%) than the east coast
(8.7%). Algal toxins can be entrained in marine ecosystems, including in
whale prey, and can chronically persist in marine mammals. Given many whale
deaths/injuries result from fishing gear entanglement and vessel strikes,
algal-induced morbidities may diminish whale capacities to detect or avoid
fishing gear and approaching vessels. While there was much interannual
variability, general increasing trends were observed in both whale
death/injury and HAB datasets which may be attributable to increased
monitoring or rising ocean temperatures. HAB prediction modeling has become
increasingly sophisticated and could be used as a tool to reduce whale
mortality by limiting human activities (e.g., curtailing fishing
operations) when HABs, whale occurrence, and maritime activities are
expected to overlap. Additional systematic data collection is needed to
track and model mechanisms underlying relationships between HABs and
incidental whale mortality.

The paper is available, open access, at:
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science/articles/10.3389/fmars.2024.1454656/full
and
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/386046162_Co-occurrence_of_harmful_algal_blooms_and_whale_deaths

Greg Silber
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