A catastrophic marine mortality event caused by a complex algal bloom including the novel brevetoxin producer, Karenia cristata (Dinophyceae)
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Harmful algal blooms of Karenia brevis (Dinophyceae) are a global anomaly, occurring in one location worldwide, causing severe marine and acute human impacts via brevetoxins (BTX). During 2025 an unprecedented, currently ongoing, mass marine mortality occurred in South Australia, across an area of ∼20,000 km 2 , persisting for >6 months, resulting in the deaths of ∼10 6 marine animals of >550 taxa, with human health impacts. Using custom metabarcoding, long-read sequencing and targeted quantitative PCR, we characterized the microalgal assemblage. Karenia cristata dominated over the sampling area, in an assemblage with four other Karenia species with varied abundances spatially and temporally. High abundances of K. cristata appeared in the austral autumn, and hydrodynamic processes appear to have entrained cells coastward in the semi-enclosed seas. We isolated the species and characterized it using light and electron microscopy, liquid chromatography mass spectrometry and a toxicity assay. We show for the first time that the rare and little known K. cristata produces significant BTX with a profile (BTX 2, 3, B5), differing from K. brevis , with toxicological effects. These findings reveal a novel, significant BTX-producing Karenia , which considering its substantial detrimental marine ecosystem impacts, is an emerging international threat with unknown consequences in changing ocean conditions.