1 PROGRAMME SUNDAY 14:00-17:30 Registration 17:30-21:30 Welcoming Cocktail Party MONDAY 08:00-09:30 09:30-09:50 09:50-10:30 Registration Opening Ceremony Plenary speaker 1 Chair: G Pitcher EUTROPHICATION AND HABS – IMPACTS OF GLOBAL CHANGES IN FERTILIZER USE PM Glibert, J Harrison, C Heil & S Seitzinger 10:30-11:00 11:00-13:00 COFFEE Session 1 – Taxonomy & Systematics Venue 1 Chair: A Zingone 1.1 PHYLOGENY OF A NEW ICHTHYOTOXIC DICTYOCHOPHYTE FORMING BLOOMS IN THE SKAGERRAK B Edvardsen, W Eikrem, G Johnsen, L Naustvoll, I Riisberg, K ShalchianTabrizi & J Throndsen 1.2 TOWARD A ‘CONSENSUS SPECIES CONCEPT’ FOR PSEUDONITZSCHIA A Amato, JHL Ghiron, WHCF Kooistra & M Montresor 1.3 MORPHOTAXONOMY AND GENETIC AFFINITIES OF FIVE NOVEL, POTENTIALLY FISH-KILLING AUSTRALIAN GYMNODINIOID DINOFLAGELLATES MF de Salas, CJS Bolch & GM Hallegraeff 1.4 MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY OF THE PROTOPERIDINIUM (DINOPHYCEAE) KE Gribble & DM Anderson 1.5 REPRODUCTIVE AND MOLECULAR DATA SUGGEST THAT PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA PUNGENS (GRUNOW EX CLEVE) HASLE MAY BE A COSMOPOLITAN BIOLOGICAL SPECIES G Casteleyn, V Chepurnov, K Sabbe, DG Mann, K Vannerum & W Vyverman 1.6 THE GENUS KARLODINIUM: MORPHOLOGY, ULTRASTRUCTURE, SPECIES CONCEPT, AND PHYLOGENY T Bergholtz, N Daugbjerg & Ø Moestrup Session 2 – Biogeography & Regional Events Venue 2 Chair: 2.1 IDENTIFICATION AND CHARACTERISATION OF CIGUATOXINS FROM DIFFERENT OCEANS RJ Lewis 2.2 GENETIC DIVERSITY IN CALIFORNIA POPULATIONS OF ALEXANDRIUM R Antrobus, M Silver & C Scholin 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 Venue 1 2 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 13:00-14:30 14:30-14:55 15:00-16:00 15:00-15:20 15:20-15:40 15:40-16:00 15:00-15:20 15:20-15:40 15:40-16:00 2.3 THE DINOFLAGELLATE GYMNODINIUM CATENATUM FROM THE COAST OF PORTUGAL: HISTORICAL RECORD, TOXIN PROFILE AND MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION A Amorim, P Pereira, C Martins, V Veloso, S Franca & B Dale 2.4 DIVERSITY, BIOGEOGRAPHY AND DISPERSAL OF BENTHIC PROROCENTRUM SPECIES IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION S Murray, Y Nagahama & Y Fukuyo 2.5 A SURVEY OF TOXIC EPIBENTHIC DINOFLAGELLATE SPECIES FROM RIA DE AVEIRO (PORTUGAL) M Hinzmann, S Craveiro, A Calado, Ø Moestrup & N Daugbjerg 2.6 INTER AND INTRA-SPECIFIC VARIABILITY IN MORPHOGENETICS AND TOXIN COMPOSITION OF ALEXANDRIUM SPP. IN IRISH COASTAL WATERS N Touzet, JM Franco & R Raine LUNCH Plenary speaker 2 Venue 1 Chair: B Reguera FIBER OPTIC MICROARRAYS FOR THE DETECTION AND ENUMERATION OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM SPECIES D Anderson, D Kulis, D Erdner, S Ahn & D Walt Session 1 – Taxonomy & Systematics Venue 1 Chair: G Hansen 1.7 COMPARATIVE STUDIES ON POPULATION GENETICS OF SKELETONEMA COSTATUM - A MODEL SPECIES FOR PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOM DYNAMICS A Godhe, MR McQuoid, I Karunasagar, I Karunasagar & A-S RehnstamHolm 1.8 MICROSATELLITE MARKERS REVEAL POPULATION GENETIC STRUCTURE OF THE TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE (DINOPHYCEAE) IN JAPANESE COASTAL WATERS S Nagai, C Lian, M Hamaguchi, Y Matsuyama, S Itakura & T Hogetsu 1.9 MULTIPLE PLASTID ORIGINS IN CHROMOPHYTES TOXICITY UNLEASHED TR Bachvaroff, MV Sanchez-Puerta, CF Delwiche & AR Place Session 2 – Biogeography & Regional Events Venue 2 Chair: 2.7 A TOXIC GYMNODINIUM CATENATUM BLOOM ASSOCIATED TO A MYRIONECTA RUBRA RED TIDE IN MAR DEL PLATA COASTAL WATERS NG Montoya, R Akselman & JI Carreto 2.8 DINOPHYSIS SPECIES AND PROROCENTRUM LIMA IN THE BLACK SEA AND WHITE SEA - IDENTITY, ECOLOGY, AND TOXICITY A Vershinin, V Sergeeva, S Morton, S Pankov, T Leighfield, S Dover, M Quilliam & J Ramsdell 2.9 PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SERIATA FROM SCOTTISH WATERS: DIVERSITY AND SEASONALITY 3 J Fehling, K Davidson, CJ Bolch & P Tett 16:00-16:30 TEA 16:30-17:30 Session 3 – Species Detection Venue 1 Chair: L Rhodes 3.1 DEVELOPMENT OF A RAPID AND AN ULTRA-SENSITIVE IMMUNO-FLUORESCENT TEST FOR THE DETECTION OF TOXIC ALGAE IN THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT N West, R Bacchieri, C Manes & H Moreau 3.2 DEVELOPMENT OF REAL-TIME PCR ASSAYS FOR ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE AND ALEXANDRIUM MINUTUM USING HYBRIDISATION PROBES S Keaveney, N Touzet, M Maher & J Patching 3.3 TOXIC ALEXANDRIUM SPECIES IN SOUTH AFRICAN WATERS: PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS AND DEVELOPMENT OF A MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTIC ASSAY C Ruiz Sebastián, Z van Helmond, S Etheridge, PA Cook, C O’Ryan & GC Pitcher 16:30-16:50 16:50-17:10 17:10-17:30 16:30-16:50 16:50-17:10 17:10-17:30 19:00 Session 4 – Bloom Detection Venue 2 Chair: R Gentien 4.1 RECENT RESULTS FROM THE BREVEBUSTER: HAS KARENIA BREVIS LOST THE ELEMENT OF SURPRISE? G Kirkpatrick, D Millie, M Moline, S Lohrenz, R Weisberg & O Schofield 4.2 MULTI-SENSOR DISCRIMINATION OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS PI Miller, JD Shutler, GF Moore & SB Groom 4.3 OCEAN COLOUR BASED SYSTEMS FOR HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM MONITORING IN THE SOUTHERN BENGUELA S Bernard, A Fawcett, T Probyn, G Pitcher & A Du Rand Cocktail Party at the Two Oceans Aquarium TUESDAY 08:30-08:55 Plenary speaker 3 Venue 1 Chair: L Edler TWENTY YEARS OF RESEARCH ON HARMFUL BROWN TIDES CAUSED BY AUREOCOCCUS ANOPHAGEFFERENS: A SYNTHESIS OF BLOOM CAUSES AND IMPACTS CJ Gobler, D Lonsdale & GL Boyer 09:00-10:20 Session 5 – Population Dynamics: environmental interactions Venue 1 Chair : S Blackburn 5.1 TRANSPORT OF HAB SPECIES IN DENSITY DRIVEN COASTAL JETS R Raine, S O’Boyle, S Lyons, G Nolan, K Medler, J Brown & L Fernand 5.2 OCCURRENCE OF A NEW KARENIA SP. (DINOPHYCEAE) ON THE NEW ZEALAND NORTHEAST COAST DURING THE 2002 HAB EVENT: IS THERE AN SST AND OCEAN COLOUR SIGNATURE? 09:00-09 :20 09:20-09:40 4 09:40-10:00 10:00-10:20 09:00-09 :20 09:20-09:40 09:40-10:00 10:00-10:20 10:20-11:00 11:00-13:00 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 FH Chang, M Uddstrom, K Richardson & M Pinkerton 5.3 THE ORIGIN OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA POPULATIONS IN SALDANHA BAY, SOUTH AFRICA C Marangoni, R Pienaar, S Sym, G Pitcher, T Probyn & P Monteiro 5.4 BIOPHYSICAL INTERACTIONS AND THE ONSET OF HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN A FJORD-LIKE ESTUARY, KILLARY HARBOUR OFF THE WEST COAST OF IRELAND C Cusack, J Silke, G McDermott, C Roden, M White, J Lyons, R Salas, G Nolan & R Raine Session 6 – Toxins & Toxicity: genetics Venue 2 Chair: D Anderson 6.1 GENOME CHARACTERIZATION OF A SAXITOXINPRODUCING CYANOBACTERIUM AL Krohn & FG Plumley 6.2 GROWTH REGULATION IN KARENIA BREVIS: GENE EXPRESSION PROFILING USING A DNA MICROARRAY FM Van Dolah, KB Lidie, JC Ryan, JS Miller, SA Brunelle & M Barbier 6.3 MOLECULAR GENETIC ANALYSIS OF SPIROLIDE BIOSYNTHESIS IN THE TOXIGENIC DINOFLAGELLATE ALEXANDRIUM OSTENFELDII A Cembella, U John, R Singh, J Walter & S MacKinnon 6.4 EXPRESSION OF POLYKETIDE SYNTHASES (PKS) DURING INDUCTION OF TOXICITY IN THE ICHTHYOTOXIC PRYMNESIOPHYTE CHRYSOCHROMULINA POLYLEPIS U John, U Tillmann, A Cembella & L Medlin COFFEE Session 5 – Population Dynamics: environmental interactions Venue 1 Chair : F Figueiras 5.5 ARE DIFFERENT DINOPHYSIS SPECIES SELECTED BY CLIMATOLOGICAL CONDITIONS? B Reguera, L Escalera, Y Pazos, Á Moroño & JM Cabanas 5.6 DYNAMICS OF LARGE SCALE PROROCENTRUM BLOOMS COUPLING WITH PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROCESSES IN EAST CHINESE COAST M Zhou 5.7 KARENIA BREVIS BLOOMS: CELL ABUNDANCE, CHLOROPHYLL A, BREVETOXIN CONCENTRATIONS IN WATER AND ZOOPLANKTON P Tester, D Shea, S Varnam & M Black 5.8 THE HIGHEST BLOOMS OF DINOPHYSIS ACUMINATA AND DINOPHYSIS ACUTA ON THE NW COAST OF PORTUGAL (2002 AND 2003) MT Moita, S Palma, L Sobrinho-Gonçalves, G Vilarinho, M Cerejo, A Duarte-Silva & PB Oliveira 5.9 INVASIVE BLOOMS OF THE GREEN ALGA CAULERPA IN SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA AND THE BAHAMAS LINKED TO ANTHROPOGENIC NITROGEN ENRICHMENT BE LaPointe, PJ Barile & MJ Wynne 5 12:40-13:00 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 13:00-14:30 14:30-14:55 15:00-16:00 15:00-15:20 15:20-15:40 5.10 PSEUDO-NIZSCHIA AUSTRALIS & P. MULTISERIE ABUNDANCE AND CELLULAR DOMOIC ACID LEVELS UNDER UV EXPOSURE AT TWO CENTRAL CALIFORNIA LOCATIONS, AVILA BEACH AND GOLETA C Mengelt, L Mydlarz, K Keltner, S McKagan, G Langlois, P Miller, B Prézelin & M Silver Session 6 – Toxins & Toxicity: detection Venue 2 Chair: G Doucette 6.5 DETECTION METHODS AND THEIR LIMITATIONS: PSP TOXINS IN FLORIDA PUFFER FISH RESPONSIBLE FOR HUMAN POISONING EVENTS IN 2004 S Etheridge, J Deeds, S Hall, K White, L Flewelling, J Abbott , J Landsberg, S Conrad, D Bodager & G Jackow 6.6 DEVELOPMENT AND VALIDATION OF YTX CELISA – A RAPID ASSAY FOR THE DETERMINATION OF YESSOTOXIN IN SHELLFISH AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES H Kleivdal, L Briggs & C Miles 6.7 RAPID AND ULTRASENSITIVE FLUORESCENT TEST FOR THE TRACKING OF TOXIC ALGAE IN THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT: THE DETAL EUROPEAN PROJECT LK Medlin, N West, K Toebe, R Bacchieri, V Séchet, S Fraga, G Hansen, O Moestrup, JL Drocourt & H Moreau 6.8 CIGUATOXIN ANALYSIS IN HUMANS, FISH AND MICE; USING BLOOD COLLECTION CARDS Y Bottein, M Chinain, J Turquet, L Chateau-Degat, R Dickey, T Darius, F Radwan & JS Ramsdell 6.9 APPLICATION OF NEURON-BASED SENSOR FOR TOXIC ALGAE MONITORING NV Kulagina, T Mikulski, GJ Doucette, JS Ramsdell & W Ma 6.10 BREVETOXIN – AN ELUSIVE TOXIN IN NEW ZEALAND WATERS P McNab, L Rhodes, J Adamson & P Holland LUNCH Plenary speaker 4 Venue 1 Chair: R Azanza INTRASPECIFIC VARIABILITY IN TOXICITY, BEHAVIOUR AND NUTRITION IN TOXIGENIC MICROALGAE JAM Burkholder & PM Glibert Session 7 – Population Dynamics: environmental interactions Venue 1 Chair : R Raine 7.1 BIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS DRIVING THE TIME AND SPACE DISTRIBUTION OF PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPECIES IN THE SOUTH TYRRHENIAN SEA A Zingone, D Sarno, R Siano, A Amato, M Montresor & P Licandro 7.2 MIXED RAPHIDOPHYTE BLOOMS IN THE DELAWARE INLAND BAYS, USA: NICHE SELECTION FOR A HAB CONSORTIUM KJ Coyne, SM Handy, KJ Portune, Y Zhang, M Doblin, E Whereat, SC Cary & DA Hutchins 6 16:00-18:00 7.3 TRACKING CHANGES IN DINOFLAGELLATE COMMUNITY STRUCTURE THROUGH TIME: AN EXAMPLE FROM MARIAGER FJORD, DENMARK, LINKED TO EUTROPHICATION M Elegaard Session 8 – Toxins & Toxicity: toxin production Venue 2 Chair: E Granéli 8.1 THE ROLE OF BACTERIA IN THE GROWTH AND TOXICITY OF GYMNODINIUM CATENATUM DH Green, A Negri, S Geier, L Llewellyn, S Blackburn & C Bolch 8.2 PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SERIATA FROM SCOTTISH WATERS: GROWTH AND TOXIN PRODUCTION K Davidson, J Fehling, CJ Bolch & SS Bates 8.3 TRACE METAL EFFECTS ON PRODUCTION OF DOMOIC ACID ISOMERS, GYMNODIMINE AND PALYTOXIN-RELATED COMPOUNDS BY MICRO-ALGAE L Rhodes, A Selwood, J Adamson & O Laczka POSTER SESSION – REFRESHMENTS Posters 1 - 161 19:30 African Evening WEDNESDAY ROUND TABLES 09:00-10:30 DETECTION AND MONITORING OF HABS 15:40-16:00 15:00-15:20 15:20-15:40 15:40-16:00 PRIORITIES FOR RESEARCH & MANAGEMENT CONCERNING THE ROLE OF BALLAST WATER IN HAB DISTRIBUTION THE EFFECTS OF HABS ON FOODWEBS GENETIC STUDIES OF HABS HABS: PUBLIC HEALTH, EDUCATION AND OUTREACH PREVENTION, CONTROL AND MITIGATION OF HABS EMERGING MARINE ALGAL TOXINS BACTERIAL ECOLOGY, TOXIN PRODUCTION AND BLOOM DYNAMICS CYANOBACTERIAL RESEARCH: STRATEGIC PLANNING 10:30-11:00 11:00-12:00 THURSDAY TEA Round table discussions continue 7 08:30-08:55 09:00-10:20 09:00-09 :20 09:20-09:40 09:40-10:00 10:00-10:20 09:00-09 :20 09:20-09:40 09:40-10:00 10:00-10:20 Plenary speaker 5 Venue 1 Chair: W Cochlan THE APPLICATION OF SOLID PHASE ADSORPTION TOXIN TRACKING (SPATT) TECHNOLOGY FOR THE EARLY WARNING OF MARINE AND FRESHWATER BIOTOXIN CONTAMINATION EVENTS L MacKenzie, V Beuzenberg, P Holland, P McNabb & L Briggs Session 9 – Population Dynamics: life cycles Venue 1 Chair : C Bolch 9.1 HOW DO THE GAMETES OF THE RARE MARINE PROTIST DINOPHYSIS ACUMINATA MATE? P Gentien, P Lazure, E Nézan, M Lunven, MP Crassous & MM Daniélou 9.2 A NEW SAMPLING DEVICE TO ESTIMATE IN SITU GERMINATION RATES OF DINOFLAGELLATE CYSTS IN SURFACE SEDIMENTS OF COASTAL WATERS A Ishikawa, M Hattori & I Imai 9.3 ORGANIC-WALLED DINOFLAGELLATE CYST PRODUCTION RELATED TO VARIATIONS IN LITHOGENIC INPUT AND UPWELLING INTENSITY IN THE CAPE BLANC REGION (OFF NW AFRICA) E Susek & KAF Zonneveld 9.4 EXAMINATION OF RAPHIDOPHYTE EXCYSTMENT IN THE DELAWARE INLAND BAYS USING QUANTITATIVE MOLECULAR TECHNIQUES KJ Portune, KJ Coyne, SM Handy, DA Hutchins & SC Cary Session 10 – Toxins & Toxicity: mechanisms of action & impacts Chair: P Hess Venue 2 10.1 CYTOTOXIC AND CYTOSKELETAL EFFECTS OF AZASPIRACID-1 ON MULTIPLE CELL LINES MJ Twiner, P Hess, MB Dechraoui, T McMahon, JS. Ramsdell, MS Samons, M Satake, T Yasumoto & GJ Doucette 10.2 DISSOLVED-PHASE EXPOSURE TO SAXITOXIN CAUSES TRANSIENT SENSORIMOTOR DEFICITS IN LARVAL HERRING KA Lefebvre, VL Trainer & NL Scholz 10.3 THE EFFECT OF HARMFUL ALGAE ON EARLY JUVENILE PACIFIC OYSTERS (CRASSOSTREA GIGAS) D Cassis & FJR "Max" Taylor 10.4 FIBROCAPSA JAPONICA, HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOM SPECIES WITH ELUSIVE ICHTHYOTOXICITY MK de Boer, MR Tyl, M Fu, G Liebezeit, A Weidner, J Naar, CR Tomas, EG Vrieling & M van Rijssel 10:20-11:00 COFFEE 11:00-13:00 Session 11 – Population Dynamics: physiology Venue 1 Chair : M Estrada 11.1 LIMITING RESOURCE AQUISITION STRATEGY BY ALEXANDRIUM CATENELLA: UPTAKE AND ACCUMMULATION OF AMMONIUM DURING NUTRIENT PULSES Y Collos, M Lespilette, A Vaquer, M Laabir & A Pastoureaud 11:00-11:20 8 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 11.2 IDENTIFYING GENTIC SIGNATURES OF TOXIN PRODUCTION AND NUTRIENT STRESS IN PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPP B Jenkins, RM Kudela, EV Armbrust, J Zehr, GJ Smith, E Ostlund, H Rodriques & A Roberts 11.3 PHOTOSYNTHESIS, RESPIRATION AND GROWTH OF NOCTILUCA SCINTILLANS WITH THE GREEN FLAGELLATED ENDOSYMBIONT PEDINOMONAS NOCTILUCAE K Furuya, H Saito & T Lirdwitayaprasit 11.4 ENVIRONMENTAL AND BEHAVIORAL INFLUENCES ON KARENIA BREVIS’ NITRATE ASSIMILATION: A BLOOM INITIATION SCENARIO G Sinclair, D Kamykowski, E Milligan, B Schaeffer & L McKay 11.5 NITROGEN ACQUISITION BY THE TOXIC MARINE CYANOBACTERIUM LYNGBYA MAJUSCULA FROM MORETON BAY AUSTRALIA AND TAMPA BAY FLORIDA JM O’Neil, S Albert, N Osborne, G Shaw, CA Heil, M Mulholland & DA Bronk 11.6 INTERANNUAL DIFFERENCES IN THE RELATIVE UPTAKE RATES OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON AND NITROGEN BY MIXOTROPHIC DINOFLAGELLATE SPECIES IN THE LAFAYETTE RIVER, VIRGINIA, 2002-2003 AM Watson, MR Mulholland, P Bernhardt, A Rocha & G Boneillo Session 10 – Toxins & Toxicity: mechanisms of action & impacts Chair: L Peperzak Venue 2 10.5 THE POTENTIAL EXPOSURE OF GREEN TURTLES TO TUMOUR PROMOTING COMPOUNDS FROM THE CYANOBACTERIA LYNGBYA MAJUSCULA K Arthur, G Shaw, C Limpus, G Balazs & J Udy 10.6 AMPHIDINOLS AND KARLOTOXINS – BROTHERS IN ARMS AR Place 10.7 TROPHIC ACCUMULATION OF PSP TOXINS IN ZOOPLANKTON DURING ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE BLOOMS IN CASCO BAY, GULF OF MAINE, USA GJ Doucette, JT Turner, CL Powell, BA Keafer & DM Anderson 10.8 CURRENT KNOWLEDGE ON THE MUTAGENIC AND CARCINOGENIC EFFECTS OF THE MARINE PHYCOTOXIN, OKADAIC ACID V Fessard & L Le Hégarat 10.9 EFFECT OF THE BIOTOXIN MICROCYSTIN ON THE FEEDING BEHAVIOR OF THE ZEBRA MUSSEL AND DYNAMICS OF THE TOXINS IN THE MUSSEL AND IN THE AQUATIC ENVIRONMENT G Juhel, J Davenport, J O’Halloran, S Culloty & RM O’Riordan 10.10 DETERMINANTS OF PATHOGENICITY IN PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA AND PIESTERIA SHUMWAYAE WK Vogelbein, P Mason, E Westcott, VJ Lovko, KS Reece, LW Haas & JD Shields 9 13:00-14:30 14:30-14:55 15:00-16:00 15:00-15:20 LUNCH Plenary speaker 6 Venue 1 Chair: J Ramsdell KILL YOUR ENEMIES AND EAT THEM WITH THE HELP OF YOUR TOXINS: AN ALGAE STRATEGY E Graneli Session 12: Population Dynamics: grazing & parasitism Venue 1 Chair: G Hallegraaeff 12.1 GRAZING IMPACTS ON PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA SPECIES POPULATION DYNAMICS ON THE WASHINGTON COAST EJ Lessard, MB Olson, MS Foy, J Wong, MJ Bernhardt, KA Baugh, B-TL Eberhart & VL Trainer 15:20-15:40 15:40-16:00 15:00-15:20 15:20-15:40 15:40-16:00 16:00-18:00 18:00-19:30 FRIDAY 12.2 ARE RAPHIDOPHYTES ACCESSIBLE TO PEDUNCLE FEEDERS? S Kloepper, U Tillmann & AD Cembella 12.3 STUDIES ON THE PARASITIC DINOFLAGELLATE, AMOEBOPHRYA SP. EX ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE MR Sengco, DW Coats, KJ Popendorf, DL Erdner, KE Gribble, P Poole & DM Anderson Session 13: Toxins & Toxicity: resistance Venue 2 Chair: S Shumway 13.1 DEVELOPMENT OF RESISTANCE TO PSP TOXINS IN THE SOFTSHELL CLAM, MYA ARENARIA: I. FITNESS CONSEQUENCES OF DIFFERENTIAL TOXINS RESISTANCE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR NATURAL SELECTION VM Bricelj, S MacQuarrie, B Twarog, L Connell & VL Trainer 13.2 DEVELOPMENT OF RESISTANCE TO PSP TOXINS IN SOFTSHELL CLAM, MYA ARENARIA, VIA MUTATION IN THE SODIUM CHANNEL GENE L Connell, B Twarog, S MacQuarrie, VM Bricelj & VL Trainer 13.3 DEVELOPMENT OF RESISTANCE TO PSP TOXINS IN THE SOFTSHELL CLAM, MYA ARENARIA: III ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDIES VL Trainer, K Konoki, WA Catterall, T Scheuer, L Connell & M Bricelj POSTER SESSION & REFRESHMENTS Posters 162 - 313 ISSHA General Assembly 09:00-10:20 Plenary speaker 7 Chair: K Furuya A GRAPH THEORY EXAMINATION OF THE GLOBAL SPREADING HYPOTHESIS F Jordán & T Wyatt Session 14: Population Dynamics: modelling Chair : S Fraga 09:00-09 :20 14.1 ATTEMPTS TO MODEL THE BLOOM DYNAMICS OF A 08:30-08:55 Venue 1 Venue 1 10 09:20-09:40 09:40-10:00 10:00-10:20 09:00-09 :20 09:20-09:40 09:40-10:00 10:00-10:20 10:20-11:00 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 TROPICAL TOXIC DINOFLAGELLATE CL Villanoy, RV Azanza, GS Jacinto, LT McManus, AM Altemerano, A Casil, K Cordero & IB Velasque 14.2 OCEAN CIRCULATION MODELING IN SUPPORT OF ECOHAB PNW M Foreman, E Di Lorenzo, B Hickey & A MacFadyen 14.3 BIOPHYSICAL MODELING IN THE ECOHAB PACIFIC NORTHWEST REGION MA Peña, M Foreman & W Cochlan 14.4 MODELLING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS WITH FUZZY LOGIC AN Blauw, L Peperzak, M Estrada, J Laanemets, E Nyman, RR Raine, D Purdie, M Johansen & P Anderson Session 15: Allelopathy Venue 2 Chair: A Cembella 15.1 DOES THE FLORIDA RED TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE USE ALLELOPATHY TO OUTCOMPETE OTHER PHYTOPLANKTON? J Kubanek, E Prince, MK Hicks, J Naar & T Villareal 15.2 IS THE TOXIC DIATOM PSEUDO-NITZSCHIA MULTISERIES HARMFUL TO OTHER ALGAE? N Lundholm, PJ Hansen & Y Kotaki 15.3 THE ALLELOPATHIC SPECIFICITY OF KARLODINIUM MICRUM TOXINS (KARLOTOXINS) JE Adolf, DN Krupatkina, AR Place, PJP Brown & AJ Lewitus 15.4 GENOTYPIC AND PHENOTYPIC VARIABILITY IN ALLELOCHEMICAL POTENTIAL WITHIN POPULATIONS OF ALEXANDRIUM TAMARENSE T Alpermann, U John, U Tillmann, K Evans & A Cembella COFFEE Session 16: Monitoring, Management & Mitigation Venue 1 Chair: L MacKenzie 16.1 THE USE OF CITIZEN-BASED ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING PROGRAMS FOR MAKING REAL-TIME OBSERVATIONS ABOUT POTENTIALLY TOXIGENIC PHYTOPLANKTON PS Anderson 16.2 MONITORING STRATEGIES FOR HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN THE LOWER GREAT LAKES: LAKE ERIE, LAKE ONTARIO AND LAKE CHAMPLAIN, USA. GL Boyer, JC Makarewicz, M Watzin, T Mihuc, JF Atkinson & SW Wilhelm 16.3 HAB’S OCCURRENCE ON THE NORTH ATLANTIC: A LONGTERM STUDY FROM THE CONTINUOUS PLANKTON RECORDER (CPR) SURVEY S Leterme & JC Mendes 16.4 MANAGEMENT OF HAB EVENTS, A REVIEW OF IRISH STRATEGIES J Silke, T Mc Mahon & P Hess 11 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 11:00-11:20 11:20-11:40 11:40-12:00 12:00-12:20 12:20-12:40 12:40-13:00 13:00-14:30 14:30-16:10 14:30-14:50 14:50-15:10 15:10-15:30 15:30-15:50 16.5 SALMON MORTALITIES ASSOCIATED WITH A BLOOM OF ALEXANDRIUM FUNDYENSE IN 2003 AND SUBSEQUENT EARLY WARNING APPROACHES FOR INDUSTRY JL Martin, FH Page, MM LeGresley, K Haya & BD Chang 16.6 NEW TECHNIQUES TO DISPERSE LESS CLAYS IN CONTROLLING FISHKILLING COCHLODINIM POLYKRIKOIDES BLOOMS IN KOREAN COASTAL WATERS HG Kim, HM Bae, KY Kim & YS Kang Session 17: Public Health, Education & Outreach Venue 2 H Enevoldsen 17.1 OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE TO AEROSOLIZED BREVETOXINS DURING FLORIDA RED TIDE EVENTS LC Backer, LE Fleming, B Kirkpatrick, R Pierce, Y-S Cheng, J Bean, D Johnson & DG Baden 17.2 PUBLIC OUTREACH MATERIALS REGARDING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS AND THEIR POSSIBLE EFFECTS ON HUMAN HEALTH B Kirkpatrick, LE Fleming, WB Stephan, L Backer, A Reich, D Dalpra, R Weisman & G Van De Bogart 17.3 HAB OUTREACH USING MULTIMEDIA: INTEGRATING OCEAN RESEARCH AND EDUCATION A deCharon, S Etheridge, T McDonnell Wysor & M Sieracki 17.4 CHRONIC SYMPTOMS EXPERIENCED IN CIGUATERA DISEASE: FIRST ASSESSMENT OF SURVIVAL CURVE M-L Chateau-Degat, M-O Huin-Blondey, NL Nguyen, C Rubin, L Backer & E Dewailly 17.5 USING THE INTERNET TO ENHANCE NATIONAL CAPACITY TO MONITOR AND MANAGE HARMFUL ALGAL EVENTS H Enevoldsen, P Haecky & J Larsen 17.6 CYLINDROSPERMOPSIN TOXICITY AND POTENTIAL HEALTH IMPACTS IR Falconer & AR Humpage LUNCH Session 16: Ballast Water: Research, Monitoring & Management Chair: A Awad Venue 1 16.7 GLOBAL TRANSPORT AND DISPERSAL OF HABS IN SHIP’S BALLAST WATER AND RECREATIONAL VESSELS MA Doblin, KJ Coyne, LC Popels, DA Hutchins, SC Cary, PA Rublee & FC Dobbs 16.8 PROGRESS IN INVESTIGATING THE POSSIBILITY THAT THE SOUTH AFRICAN BROWN TIDE SPECIES IS INTRODUCED L Botes 16.9 ABOUT EXOTIC PHYTOPLANKTON INCURSION IN GABES GULF BY BALLAST WATER H Dammal, A Hamza & A Bou Ain 16.10 THE MICROALGAE FROM SEPETIBA BAY, BRAZIL: LESSONS FROM A PORT SURVEY (GLOBALLAST PROGRAM) 12 MC Villac, D Tenenbaum, M Matos, S Viana, V Garcia & V Juliano 15:50-16:10 16:10-16:30 14:30-14:50 14:50-15:10 15:10-15:30 15:50-16:10 16:10-16:30 16:10-16:30 16:30-18:00 19:30 16.11 GERMINATION AND SPECIES COMPOSITION OF DINOFLAGELLATES FROM BALLAST TANKS AND RECENT SEDIMENTS ON THE SOUTH COAST OF FINLAND S Pertola, MA Faust & H Kuosa 16.12 CHARACTERIZATION OF RED TIDES IN CHINA AND MANAGEMENT ACTIONS G Hao & X Li Session 17: Public Health, Education & Outreach Venue 2 Chair: J Martin 17.7 MEASURING TOXINS OR DETECTING PHYTOPLANKTON? – A REVIEW OF MONITORING AND SURVEILLANCE TECHNIQUES P Hess 17.8 HAB IMPACTS ALONG THE WASHINGTON COAST – STAKEHOLDER OUTREACH DL Ayres 17.9 THE USE OF ONLINE RESOURCES IN THE IDENTIFICATION AND MONITORING OF HARMFUL ALGAL SPECIES WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE PLANKTON*NET PROJECT K Kraberg, M Hoppenrath, KH Wiltshire, J Larsen, D Vaulot & DJ Patterson 17.10 TOXICOLOGICAL STUDIES OF SHELLFISH CONTAMINANTS AND THEIR RELATION TO RISK ASSESSMENT R Munday 17.11 AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDY TO EXAMINE THE EFFECTS OF THE AEROSOLIZED FLORIDA RED TIDE TOXINS ON PEOPLE WITH REACTIVE AIRWAY DISEASE B Kirkpatrick, LE Fleming, LC Backer, D Dalpra, A Wanner, J Bean, A Reich, W Abraham, J Zais, G Bossart, J Naar, YS Cheng, R Pierce & DG Baden TEA ISSHA Council Meeting Banquet