Everything about Algal Blooms totally explained
An
algal bloom or
marine bloom or
water bloom is a rapid increase in the population of
algae in an aquatic system. Algal blooms may occur in freshwater as well as marine environments. Typically only one or a few
phytoplankton species are involved and some blooms may be recognized by discoloration of the water resulting from the high density of pigmented cells. Although there's no officially recognized threshold level, algae can be considered to be blooming at concentrations of hundreds to thousands of cells per milliliter, depending on the causative species. Algal bloom concentrations may reach millions of cells per milliliter. Colors observed are green, yellowish-brown, or red. Bright green blooms may also occur. These are a result of blue-green algae, which are actually bacteria (
cyanobacteria).
Some algal blooms are the result of an excess of nutrients (particularly
phosphorus and
nitrogen) into waters and higher concentrations of these nutrients in water cause increased growth of algae and green plants. As more algae and plants grow, others die. This dead organic matter becomes food for bacteria that decomposes it. With more food available, the bacteria increase in number and use up the dissolved oxygen in the water. When the dissolved oxygen content decreases, many fish and aquatic insects can't survive. This results in a dead area.
Algal blooms may also be of concern as some species of algae produce
neurotoxins. At the high cell concentrations reached during some blooms, these toxins may have severe biological impacts on wildlife. Algal blooms composed of phytoplankters known to naturally produce biotoxins are often called Harmful Algal Blooms, or HABs.
Algal blooms are monitored using biomass measurements coupled with the examination of species present. A widely-used measure of algal and cyanobacterial biomass is the
chlorophyll concentration. Peak values of chlorophyll
a for an
oligotrophic lake are about 1-10 µg/l, while in a
eutrophic lake they can reach 300 µg/l. In cases of
hypereutrophy, such as
Hartbeespoort Dam in
South Africa, maxima of chlorophyll a can be as high as 3,000 µg/l.
Black water
So-called
black water is a dark discoloration of sea water, first described in the
Florida Bay in January 2002.
Water treatment
Algal blooms sometimes occur in drinking water supplies. In such cases, toxins from the bloom can survive standard water purifying treatments. Researchers at
Florida International University in
Miami are experimenting with using 640-kilohertz
ultrasound waves that create micropressure zones as hot as 3,700 °C. This breaks some water molecules into reactive fragments that can kill algae.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Algal Blooms'.
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