Facing the Algal Threat in Adelaide: Miller-Frost

Louise Miller-Frost’s Circular, July 2025

The coastline and waters are a great asset to Boothby residents, and many of us very much value the time we spend there walking on the beach, swimming in the ocean, fishing off the jetties or small boats, or just sitting contemplating the spectacular views.

And so the Algal Bloom currently affecting much of the SA coastline is of great concern.

 

The coastline and waters are a great asset to Boothby residents, and many of us very much value the time we spend there walking on the beach, swimming in the ocean, fishing off the jetties or small boats, or just sitting contemplating the spectacular views.

And so the Algal Bloom currently affecting much of the SA coastline is of great concern.

The impact on the local environment and ecosystems, the widespread marine species deaths, the impact on recreational and commercial fishing, the impact on tourism and local businesses is all of great concern to locals and to all levels of government.

The South Australian Government is leading the response, as state governments hold primary responsibility for managing and monitoring coastal waters. The Federal Government has been supporting the SA Government on this outbreak across a number of portfolios, including Environment, Fisheries and Emergency Management and I have been regularly speaking with the Ministers at both levels of government and with my local state colleagues as well.

I will continue advocating about this to the South Australian and the Federal Government but I also wanted to give you a brief FAQ and links to some resources to keep yourselves informed in this changing issue.

What is it? 
The algae involved is a naturally occurring algal species called Karenia mikimotoi . Similar blooms have occurred overseas and locally, including a significant bloom in Coffin Bay on the Eyre Peninsula in 2014.

What caused it?
Experts believe there are three potential plausible contributing factors:

  • The 2022-23 River Murray flooding washing extra nutrients into the sea
  • An unprecedented cold-water upwelling in summer 2023-24 that brought nutrient-rich water to the surface
  • A marine heatwave that started in September 2024.  Sea temperatures are reported to be around 2.5 degrees warmer than usual.

Is it dangerous to humans?
K. mikimotoi is not known to cause any long term harmful effects in humans but exposure to discoloured or foamy water can cause short term skin and eye irritation and respiratory symptoms, including coughing and shortness of breath.  This includes exposure via surf spray and aerosol water/algal particles.

SA Health advises there is no evidence that people with asthma are more susceptible to symptoms caused by these algal particles, however asthmatics are advised to adhere to their asthma management plan should they experience symptoms.

Do not eat dead or affected fish, or shellfish from affected areas.

(Source: SA Health)

What do I do if I experience symptoms?
For respiratory symptoms, provide supportive care. People with asthma are advised to adhere to their asthma management plan.

For skin irritation, patients should wash their skin thoroughly with clean water after any exposure. Patients should avoid wearing contaminated clothing until clothing has been laundered using standard washing cycles. In severe cases it may be worth considering antihistamines or steroids for symptomatic relief.

For eye irritation that has not resolved by moving away from the area, advise patient to remove their contact lenses if used. Irrigate the eyes thoroughly with normal saline. Refer the patient to an ophthalmologist if eye symptoms persist after thorough irrigation and there is no further exposure.

If you have symptoms that are severe or do not resolve, seek medical advice from your doctor. Call 000 in a medical emergency.

(Source: SA Health)

Is it dangerous to pets?
K. mikimotoi damages the gills and gill structures of marine life so its impact on animals such as dogs is less direct.

Animals such as dogs should also be kept out of affected waters and should be kept away from dead or dying fish and other sealife to prevent them from eating them. If your dog (or other animal) has been exposed to affected waters, bathe them.

How can I minimise exposure?
Avoid swimming and walking along beaches where there is discoloured water and foam, or where there is dead or dying sealife. If you do enter this water, take care to wash in clean water afterwards and wash any exposed clothing, towels and equipment.

Leave the beach and adjacent foreshore if symptoms such as eye and respiratory irritation are experienced

If you are a local resident and experience symptoms around your home, stay indoors with windows closed, until symptoms resolve.

How long will this continue?
Unfortunately, nothing can be done to dilute or dissipate the bloom.

Natural events such as this algal bloom cannot be quickly resolved. Similar events globally have lasted weeks to months depending on wind, rain and ocean temperatures.  The algae can also lay dormant and re-emerge when conditions allow.

This is a dynamic and evolving situation, with the location and impact of the bloom continuing to shift in response to changing weather and ocean conditions. As such, predicting its behaviour and impact remains complex. Recent statewide observations indicate a decrease in sea surface temperatures in shallow coastal and gulf waters. However, marine heatwave conditions persist in deeper continental shelf areas.

Is this caused by climate change?
While caution is usually attached to identifying any one particular incident as being caused by climate change, the increase in ocean temperatures and the impact on marine ecosystems is something that has been warned about as an impact of climate change.

What do I do if I find a dead fish / marine life?
Report fish deaths to FISHWATCH on 1800 065 522

The following resources are regularly updated and provide valuable insights:

As always, if there is any way I can be of assistance as your Federal representative, please contact my office on 8374 0511 or Louise.Miller-Frost.MP@aph.gov.au.

**************

ANOTHER ILLUSTRATIVE ARTICLE ….

What struck Scott Bennett most were the razor clams. The long saltwater clams, resembling old-fashioned razors, normally burrow into sand to avoid predators. But when Bennett, an ecologist, visited South Australia’s Great Southern Reef last month, he saw thousands of them rotting on the sea floor.

“100% of them were dead and wasting away on the bottom,” Bennett told CNN.

Since March, a harmful algal bloom, fueled by a marine heat wave, has been choking South Australia’s coastline, turning once-colorful ecosystems filled with thriving marine life into underwater graveyards.

The bloom has killed about 15,000 animals from over 450 species, according to observations on the citizen science site iNaturalist. They include longfinned worm eels, surf crabs, warty prowfish, leafy seadragons, hairy mussels and common bottlenose dolphins.

A sea creature washed onto the beach by a toxic algal bloom.
A starfish is seen as toxic algal bloom washes dead and dying sea creatures between O'Sullivan Beach and Hallett Cove in Adelaide, Australia, on July 12, 2025.

The algae have poisoned more than 4,500 square kilometers (1,737 square miles) of the state’s waters – an area larger than Rhode Island – littering beaches with carcasses and ravaging an area known for its diversity.

It’s “one of the worst marine disasters in living memory,” according to a report by the Biodiversity Council, an independent expert group founded by 11 Australian universities.

The toxic algal bloom has devastated South Australia’s fishing industry and repelled beachgoers, serving as a stark warning of what happens when climate change goes unchecked.

Once a bloom begins, there is no way of stopping it.

“This shouldn’t be treated as an isolated event,” Bennett said. “This is symptomatic of climate driven impacts that we’re seeing across Australia due to climate change.”

A toxic algal bloom washes dead and dying sea creatures onto Tennyson Beach in Adelaide, Australia, on July 11, 2025.

A mysterious yellow foam

It all started back in March, when dozens of surfers at beaches outside Gulf St Vincent, about an hour south of state capital Adelaide, reported experiencing a sore throat, dry cough and blurred vision after emerging from the sea.

Shortly after, a mysterious yellow foam appeared in the surf. Then, dead marine animals started washing up.

Scientists at the University of Technology Sydney soon confirmed the culprit: a buildup of a tiny planktonic algae called Karenia mikimotoi. And it was spreading.

In early May, the government of Kangaroo Island, a popular eco-tourism destination, said the algal bloom had reached its coastline. A storm at the end of May pushed the algae down the coast into the Coorong lagoon. By July, it had reached the beaches of Adelaide.

Diverse algae are essential to healthy marine ecosystems, converting carbon dioxide into oxygen and benefiting organisms all the way up the food chain, from sea sponges and crabs to whales.

But too much of one specific type of algae can be toxic, causing a harmful algal bloom, also sometimes known as a red tide.While Kareniami kimotoi does not cause long-term harm to humans, it can damage the gills of fish and shellfish, preventing them from breathing. Algal blooms can also cause discoloration in the water and block sunlight from coming in, harming ecosystems.

The Great Southern Reef is a haven for “really unique” biodiversity, said Bennett, a researcher at the University of Tasmania, who coined the name for the interconnected reef system which spans Australia’s south coast.

About 70% of the species that live there are endemic to the area, he said, meaning they are found nowhere else in the world.

“For these species, once they’re gone, they’re gone.”

A damaged kelp forest in South Australia.

‘There is zero life’

Nathan Eatts hasn’t caught a single squid since April. On a good day, Eatts could catch 100 in the waters where he’s fished commercially for 15 years off South Australia’s Fleurieu Peninsula. Since the harmful algal bloom began, his business, Cape Calamari, has gone “pretty much down to zero,” Eatts said.

While more mobile fish can move to cleaner waters during an algal bloom, invertebrates like shellfish and sea stars, and other species associated with the reef, are suffocated by toxic algae.

“We don’t know whether they’ve all died, or they’re just seeking refuge in deeper water, waiting for it all to clear,” he said.

Many fishers have lost their livelihoods overnight, with about a third of the state waters completely devoid of fish, according to Pat Tripodi, the executive officer of the Marine Fishers Association, which represents the interests of most commercial fishing license holders in the state.

“Wherever the algal bloom hits, there is zero life,” Tripodi said.“It’s a really high emotional and mental strain on these individuals, because many of them don’t know how or if they will ever recover from it.”

Beyond the fishers themselves, the bloom is having a knock-on effect on the state’s seafood industry, which is valued at almost 480 million Australian dollars ($315 million).

Seafood processors, transport companies, grocers and restaurants are all feeling the pain, Tripodi said. Eatts comes from a long line of fishers, and they’ve never seen anything like this.
Damaged sealife.

The last time a harmful agal bloom swept South Australia was in 2014, but it was much more localized.

Toxic algal blooms are naturally occurring and are common around the world, including in the US. But climate change is making them more frequent and more severe.

The foundation for the South Australian bloom was laid back in 2022, experts believe, when catastrophic flooding swept the Murray, Australia’s longest river, washing extra nutrients into the Southern Ocean. The next summer, currents brought nutrient-rich water to the surface in a process called cold water upwelling.

Then, a marine heatwave in September 2024 caused ocean temperatures to be about 2.5 degrees Celsius warmer than usual. That, combined with calm water conditions and light wind created conditions for the algae to grow and spread.

Dead sea creatures washed onto the beach by a toxic agal bloom.
A dead stingray in neon green water.
A toxic algal bloom washes dead and dying sea creatures onto Largs Beach in Adelaide, Australia, on July 12, 2025.

A fire that can’t be put out

There is no way for humans to stop a harmful algal bloom – its trajectory largely depends on natural factors like wind and weather patterns.

Peter Malinauskas, South Australia’s premier, told public broadcaster the ABC on Tuesday that the crisis is a “natural disaster, but it’s different to ones that we’re familiar with in Australia.”

“With a bushfire, you can put the fire out. If there’s a flood, you can do the modeling to have a sense of where the water is going to go, whereas this is so entirely unprecedented. We don’t really know how it’s going to play out over coming weeks and months ahead.”

This week, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s government announced a support package of 14 million Australian dollars ($9.2 million), which has been matched by the state, to help with the cleanup and economic fallout from the ecological crisis.

But Canberra stopped short of calling it a natural disaster, a declaration which would have unlocked additional funding.

As extreme heat events become more common around the world, Bennett said the government needs to do more to prevent and protect against future algal blooms – first and foremost by cutting carbon emissions.

Marine ecosystems can be “resilient,” Bennett said. But he added that Australia must protect habitats, such as kelp forests, seagrass meadows, and oyster reefs, which absorb excess nutrients and keep the oceans healthy.

Eatts, the calamari fisher, said it “hits home hard” to see South Australia’s natural beauty spoiled by this crisis. The other day, he saw a dead dolphin on his local beach.

“You take it for granted where you live and what you see on a daily basis,” he said. “But it takes one event of nature like this to come through, and it breaks your heart watching it unfolding.

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, australian media, economic processes, governance, landscape wondrous, life stories, politIcal discourse, security

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Thuppahi's Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading