News

The deadly algal bloom floating in South Australian waters, causing masses of dead fish and rays to wash up on local beaches, ...
A massive, toxic algal bloom that has killed thousands of fish, sharks and marine animals in South Australia has spread to a ...
The deadly algal bloom floating in South Australian waters - causing masses of dead fish and rays to wash up on local beaches - has reached Adelaide after a change in weather conditions.
The South Australia fish farming company Clean Seas Seafood says it has detected a potentially damaging algae around one of ...
The algal bloom devastating South Australian marine life has now officially been found in the Port River.
Climate tipping points are affecting coral reefs, ocean currents, and forests. The shocking toxic algae bloom in South Australia may be one small taste of what awaits.
What first seems like some type of unsettling waterborne disease is simply an algal bloom. Algal blooms occur when microalgal ...
An ecologist says bioluminescent algae detected in South Australian waters could help fight the devastating toxic algal bloom ...
Densely concentrated algal blooms deplete the oxygen in the water which means ... algae had recently killed some 200 marine species off the coast of South Australia including a ten-foot long great ...
Sharks, rays, octopus and penguins are among more than 330 species killed by the mass algal bloom washing across South Australia’s coasts. It won’t end there.
The deadly micro algal bloom that has killed millions of marine creatures along South Australia's coastline continues to wreak havoc and cause "complete ecosystem failure from the bottom up".
South Australian beaches have been awash with foamy, discolored water and dead marine life for months. The problem hasn't gone away; it has spread. This bloom represents a stark warning to coastal ...