Marc Suddleson
Suddleson is a senior NCCOS program manager who oversees a research portfolio worth on average $2-3 million per year, developing new ocean sensors and forecasts
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The U.S. government is closed. This site will not be updated; however, NOAA websites and social media channels necessary to protect lives and property will be maintained. To learn more, visit commerce.gov.
For the latest forecasts and critical weather information, visit weather.gov.
Suddleson is a senior NCCOS program manager who oversees a research portfolio worth on average $2-3 million per year, developing new ocean sensors and forecasts
We are collecting data to understand the impacts of shellfish-killing algae and their toxins on aquaculture farms and wild populations and to develop a warning
Competitive Research Program Our External Harmful Algal Bloom Portfolio Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) occur in all coastal states and cause adverse public health, socioeconomic, and
A publication sponsored in part by NCCOS presents a retrospective analysis of harmful algal bloom (HAB) related mortality events in California, Washington and Rhode Island
A coalition of researchers funded by the NOAA Monitoring and Event Response for Harmful Algal Blooms (MERHAB) Program recently came together to co-locate an Environmental
NCCOS recently supported a review of the status of marine HAB problems in the U.S., part of a global statistical analysis of harmful algal blooms
In the summers of 2018 and 2019, shellfish growers in Washington state were rocked by mass mortalities of their crops, but the precise causes of
NCCOS Competitive Research Program (CRP) and the U.S. National Office for Harmful Algal Blooms at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) released proceedings from a
NCCOS funded partners recently completed field work in Kodiak Alaska to continue advancing a coordinated, multi-region MERHAB research project. This work is helping to establish
NCCOS scientists developed a new, effective method to ensure safe shellfish harvesting in Washington state, increasingly threatened by known and emerging algal bloom (HAB) toxins.