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Harmful algal blooms and climate change: exploring future distribution changes [PDF]

open access: yesICES Journal of Marine Science, 2018
AbstractHarmful algae can cause death in fish, shellfish, marine mammals, and humans, via their toxins or from effects associated with their sheer quantity. There are many species, which cause a variety of problems around north-west Europe, and the frequency and distribution of algal blooms have altered in the recent past.
Bryony L Townhill   +8 more
core   +8 more sources

Climate change and harmful benthic microalgae

open access: yesHarmful Algae, 2020
Sea surface temperatures in the world's oceans are projected to warm by 0.4-1.4 °C by mid twenty-first century causing many tropical and sub-tropical harmful dinoflagellate genera like Gambierdiscus, Fukuyoa and Ostreopsis (benthic harmful algal bloom species, BHABs) to exhibit higher growth rates over much of their current geographic range, resulting ...
Patricia A. Tester   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Interannual and Decadal Changes in Harmful Algal Blooms in the Coastal Waters of Fujian, China

open access: yesToxins, 2022
The temporal and spatial variability of harmful algal blooms (HABs) in coastal waters of Fujian were analyzed at interannual and decadal scales based on recorded HAB events collected from 1956 to 2019.
Caiyun Zhang
doaj   +1 more source

Climate change and substance use disorders – do we understand the risks?

open access: yesEuropean Psychiatry, 2022
Introduction Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of severe heatwaves, storms, floods, droughts, and wildfires. These events cause widespread economic and social disruption and are undermining population health worldwide.
F. Vergunst, H. Berry
doaj   +1 more source

First Case of Brevetoxicosis Linked to Rough-Toothed Dolphin (Steno bredanensis) Mass-Mortality Event in Eastern Central Atlantic Ocean: A Climate Change Effect?

open access: yesFrontiers in Marine Science, 2022
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) have been increasingly recorded over the last decades and much work has linked these events to multiple oceanographic and climate disturbances.
Antonio Fernández   +10 more
doaj   +1 more source

Climate change and marine ecosystems: Implications for human health

open access: yesAmrita Journal of Medicine, 2023
Despite serious progress in the development of nonconventional energy resources, fossil fuel continues to remain the most convenient source of energy across the globe.
Mohamed Hatha Abdulla
doaj   +1 more source

Climate Change and the Occurrence of Harmful Microorganisms in Florida’s Ocean and Coastal Waters

open access: yesEDIS, 2015
Climate change is expected to result in increased temperatures of nearshore ocean water, and this could lead to increased growth of harmful microorganisms.
Karl Havens
doaj   +5 more sources

Is Climate Change Harming our Kidneys?

open access: yesPortuguese Journal of Nephrology & Hypertension, 2023
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is highly prevalent and is predicted to become the fifth highest cause of premature mortality globally by 2040. There are several risk factors for CKD and the environmental conditions play an important role on the development of kidney injury.
Ana Martins, Ivo Laranjinha
openaire   +3 more sources

Environmental Impact on Harmful Species Pseudo-nitzschia spp. and Phaeocystis globosa Phenology and Niche

open access: yesJournal of Marine Science and Engineering, 2022
Global environmental change modifies the phytoplankton community, which leads to variations in their phenology and potentially causes a temporal mismatch between primary producers and consumers.
Stéphane Karasiewicz, Alain Lefebvre
doaj   +1 more source

Harm, Change, and Time [PDF]

open access: yesJournal of Medicine and Philosophy, 2012
What is harm? I offer an account that involves the victim's either suffering some adverse intrinsic change or being prevented from enjoying some beneficial intrinsic change. No one is harmed, I claim, in virtue of relational changes alone. Thus (excepting for contrived cases), there are neither posthumous harms nor, in life, harms of the undiscovered ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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