A Florida Red Tide Planning and Coordination Meeting was held
November 6-7, 1996. Florida red tide researchers and colleagues
discussed and summarized information and research needs.
Karen A. Steidinger1, Beverly S. Roberts1,
Patricia A. Tester2, Carmelo R. Tomas1 and
Gabriel A. Vargo3
1Florida Department of
Environmental Protection, Florida Marine Research Institute, 100
8th Avenue SE, St. Petersburg, FL 33701; 2National
Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast Fisheries Science Center,
Beaufort Laboratory, Beaufort, NC 28516; 3University of
South Florida, Department of Marine Science, 140 7th Avenue S, St.
Petersburg, FL 33701
INTRODUCTION
A Florida Red Tide Planning and Coordination Meeting was held
November 6-7, 1996 and hosted by the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection's Florida Marine Research Institute in St.
Petersburg, Florida. The purpose of the meeting was to bring
Florida red tide researchers and their colleagues together to:
- Identify and review critical information gaps in the knowledge
of Florida red tides that relate to marine resource management
issues;
- Identify research and other avenues of investigation that can
provide the missing information;
- Learn who is doing what and how we can maximize human,
physical, and financial resources through partnerships and
collaborations; and
- Produce a research outline based on identified information
needs as the product of the meeting.
Many of the attendees were collaborators or contractors on state
projects and have diverse expertise in harmful algal bloom
dynamics, biotoxins, shellfish biology and management, endangered
species biology and management, remote sensing, oceanography and
circulation patterns, public health and epidemiology, aquatic
health, and other fields. Thirty participants attended the meeting
and represented academia (9), state agencies (12), federal agencies
(6), and other institutes and laboratories (3). These scientists
were from Florida, Texas, South Carolina, North Carolina, and
Massachusetts. The appendices contain the agenda, a list of
attendees and their affiliation, and handouts including a draft
bibliography on Gulf of Mexico harmful algal blooms and their
impacts as part of an EPA Gulf of Mexico Program grant. Attendees
were asked to contribute to the bibliography to make it as complete
as possible so that it can be later distributed on a floppy
disk.
One of the handouts was a table containing columns indicating
"what we know about red tides" and "what we do not know about red
tides" framed as questions. This information served as an
introduction to Florida red tides and provided a format for
discussing data gaps and approaches to filling those gaps. It was
agreed that this format would be used by the working groups to add
additional questions. The first day, three groups were formed with
each group assigned a mix of expertise to address the same
questions. On the second day, attendees split into two groups,
"Living Marine Resources and Public Health" and "Bloom Dynamics,"
to finalize the questions, action items, or approaches needed
(research or other investigations). This summary is based on the
results of those sessions.
On the following pages, action items are listed as bullet
statements and indicate suggested research or activity to address
specific data gaps. When these action items are repeated or
redundant between discussion topics (i.e., bloom dynamics and
living marine resources and public health) or between questions in
the same topic, the specific action item should be interpreted to
be a high priority.
Brief
Historical Perspective (PDF 28 KB)
Bloom Dynamics
(PDF 24 KB)
Summary of the Florida
Red Tide Research Planning and Coordination Meeting, November 6-7,
1996 (PDF 22 KB)
You will need Adobe Reader to view these PDF files.
To download Adobe Reader, visit
http://get.adobe.com/reader/