You are here

Biologist featured in BBC article discussing algal blooms caused by pollution

Top Stories

Ten College of Sciences Faculty Honored

The University of Louisiana at Lafayette honored faculty, researchers and mentors whose work is advancing discovery

Read More ➝

Viability of Invasive Carp as Crawfish Bait

A team of researchers in our School of Biological Sciences, led by professors Kelly Robinson and Emily Kane,

Read More ➝

(Image credit: David-McNew / Getty Images)

Dr. Beth Stauffer, of our Biology Department, is featured in the BBC Future article The pollution causing harmful algal blooms By Tim Smedley on 11 January 2023.

Here's a brief extract to whet your appetite. Rising temperatures and pollution have led to an explosive growth of harmful algal blooms, contaminating our drinking water and harming human health. It is the "smell of decay and death", says Beth Stauffer, from the University of Louisiana. "It has a physical presence. This layer of very striking greens and blueish greens…when you put your paddle in it, you can feel it." She's describing the harmful algal blooms (HABs) that used to be more associated with marine environments. But in recent years they've been moving further inland and affecting freshwater systems, too. And scientists such as Stauffer are trying to find out why.

SHARE THIS |