Ducks in marina water with bright green algal bloom

Annual Conference on blue-green algae: call for submissions

The Rivers Trust’s Annual Conference in 2025 will examine the vast impacts of blue-green algal blooms on waterbodies whilst uncovering the root causes of how and why they occur, and the integral roles played by our rivers and catchments. 


Rebecca Duncan

05/02/25

Blue-green algae are more and more present in news headlines, not least in relation to Lough Neagh, the UK’s largest lake. But this ecological disaster is anything but new and is increasing in frequency and severity. They are not actually algae, but a group of photosynthesising bacteria called cyanobacteria - microscopic organisms that naturally occur in freshwater bodies. When conditions are favourable, cyanobacteria proliferate to form the blooms that appear like algae, causing a range of subsequent problems that will only worsen in the future. Pollution from catchments and rivers can have significant impacts on waterbodies such as lakes, creating the perfect storm of conditions for blue-green algae to thrive.

The impacts of these blooms go well beyond them being an eye sore to our waterbodies; they affect tourism, recreation, fisheries, agriculture, and property values, all of which are essential components of sustainable social and economic development. This blanket of blue-green algae suffocates our water bodies by reducing oxygen and sunlight and releases harmful toxins, posing health risks to not just wildlife, but people too.

Whilst environmental and climatic factors like warmer temperatures, excess nutrients, and low rainfall are typically known as the key drivers for triggering algal blooms, ongoing scientific research highlights how the causes are much more varied and have been compounded over time. In fact, algal blooms are largely a symptom of systemic failures of land and sewage management, exacerbated by the increasing pressures of climate change. Unravelling the myriad causes of blue-green algae will help us to restore balance in our catchments and improve environmental health in the round.

This online conference will delve deeper into the features, causes and impacts of blue-green algal blooms on water bodies, communities, and the economy, as we try to mitigate their effects and find ways to reverse the factors causing their proliferation. Addressing the causes of blue-green algal blooms is no easy feat, and will require multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral solutions at a whole catchment scale, but further understanding this is a step in the right direction.

Call for Submissions

We are keen to present a diverse conference line-up featuring voices from the Rivers Trust movement, the wider environmental sector, industry, landowners, governance, and campaigners. If you have experience of dealing with blue-green algae, it’s root causes or knowledge on the roles played by rivers and catchments, please get in touch. Whether it’s a presentation, panel discussion, or something else, we’re open to all ideas.

Submit your idea

To submit an idea, please fill in the submissions form by Friday 21st February 2025.

If we decide to take your idea forward, we will contact you by Wednesday 5th March. If you have not heard back from us by this time, it means your submission has sadly been unsuccessful.

Any questions can be directed to [email protected].

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