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PLANET EARTH:OUR LOVING HOME
Harmful Algal Blooms: Devastating Domoic Acid – P1/2
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Domoic acid toxicity
has been known
to affect marine life,
in particular here,
on the US west coast.
We’ve seen lots of
evidence for marine
mammals being affected.
Greetings,
attentive viewers,
to this week’s episode of
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home, where
we’ll present part one of
our two-part series on
the harmful algal blooms,
known as HABs,
that are injuring coastal
ecosystems around the globe,
with a focus on the threat
to marine animals
caused by domoic acid.
For expert insight
on this issue we’ll hear
from Dr. Vera Trainer,
a supervisory
oceanographer
at the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric
Administration’s
Northwest Fisheries
Science Center in Seattle,
Washington, USA
who has conducted HAB
research for many years
and Dr. Bill Cochlan,
a biological oceanographer
at the Romberg
Tiburon Center
for Environmental Studies,
a part of
the San Francisco
State University system,
in Tiburon,
California, USA.
Dr. Cochlan has also done
extensive work
on the issue
of harmful algal blooms.
The tiny marine
organisms known as
phytoplankton
play a pivotal role in
global carbon circulation,
being responsible for
50% of all photosynthetic
activity on Earth,
and emitting vast
amounts of oxygen
into the atmosphere.
However, some types
of phytoplankton
cause HABs,
which wreak havoc
in aquatic environments.
Approximately 300
species of microalgae
are known
to form algae blooms.
And almost a fourth
of these species
can generate toxins.
As a result of toxin transfer
through the food chain,
HABs may debilitate
or kill animals near
or at the top of the chain.
An algae bloom is much
like a bloom of flowers,
for example, that you
would see in a field.
It’s a high number of cells
that presents in the ocean.
Usually when scientists
use the term “bloom,”
they refer to or
they mean approximately
a million cells per liter.
It’s high enough numbers
to actually be able
to see in the water.
It depends on the species,
but some algae
can double their biomass
every 12 hours.
But generally, once a day
is a standard rate for
most phytoplankton species.
Harmful algal blooms
are often called “red tide”
in the media because
their size may become
so great that the waters
in which they occur
appear red in color.
But the color of the algae’s
pigment varies.
Scientists do prefer (the term)
“harmful algal bloom”
to “red tide.”
These blooms of organisms
are not always red.
They're lots of colors;
all the colors of leaves
are those represented
in marine algae as well,
so they can be brown,
they can be green, and
they can be yellowish.
HABs can occur in both
freshwater and
marine environments
regardless of water
temperature and salinity
and affect most of the
world’s coastal areas.
The domoic acid-
producing algae called
Pseudo-nitzchia is not
isolated to any one area,
but rather it is found
across the globe.
What we do find is now
a worldwide occurrence.
The cells that produce
domoic acid do well
in cold water
as well as warm water.
They have a high tolerance
to salinity, from very,
very high salinity waters
to low salinity waters.
They’re all marine,
but they can do well
in low salinity so in
estuarine environments
as well.
But they tend to be
most abundant in,
as I mentioned before,
Eastern boundary
currents.
And Eastern boundary
currents are the ones
where we have upwelling
of deep water
that comes to the surface.
One of the hotspots
for this sort of activity
is the west coast
of North America,
along California, Oregon
and Washington state.
We also have it
in South Africa, that’s also
the Benguela Current,
which is another Eastern
boundary current.
They do find it in Europe,
they found
in Japan and Asia
and in South America.
But right here
off Monterey Bay (USA),
off the Washington State
(USA) coast,
these are considered
very, very toxic zones.
Pseudo-nitzschia
averages around
one doubling
(in population) a day.
Because it is a diatom,
it makes it one of a
special group of plankton.
In that they don’t have
an organic cell wall.
Instead they have
a cell wall that’s made of
silica or silicon.
Because of that,
it doesn’t require
as much energy
to make that cell wall.
So diatoms in general are
a little more ecologically
efficient, or it may make
them more successful
compared to other cells.
Domoic acid
bio-accumulates,
meaning it increases
in toxicity as it is passed
up along the food chain.
It starts with small,
plankton-eating fish like
sardines and anchovies
and shellfish and
at the end of the cycle
can fatally poison
larger species.
Domoic acid is
a compound that is toxic
to vertebrates.
It is toxic to humans,
marine mammals,
and marine birds.
It is a compound that is
very close in structure
to our amino acids.
So amino acids
are the building blocks
of proteins.
We know that
Pseudo-nitzschia
makes the toxin; the toxin
is then incorporated
either into the fish
or the shellfish.
Once the fish all die
and eventually
sink to the bottom, there
still could be a transfer
of that domoic acid
to the benthos, to the
organisms on the bottom,
the positive feeders
and such.
So an important thing
when you study marine
biology and marine ecology
is understanding
these linkages.
From the very, very
small microscopic
phytoplankton to these
large multi-cellular whales,
there are a lot of
very direct linkages.
And with respect to these
diatoms, generally
you don't find an ill effect
if the series of linkages
is more than three.
There's usually
just two linkages from
the phytoplankton
to the planktivorous fish
or shellfish that eat them
by filter feeding,
to the next step.
And that next step,
that's where the animals
or birds are impacted.
So it's a very short chain.
In April 2011,
dolphins washed ashore
at various points along
the Southern California,
USA coastline.
Some were seen
experiencing seizures
before dying, while
others had already died
before reaching land.
Domoic acid is suspected
as the cause or one of
the factors in the deaths.
And more recently,
dolphins have been
affected by
domoic acid poisoning.
And we have to be
careful in saying that
domoic acid is
a cause of death or the
sole cause of poisoning
because it could be
possible that
a number of neurotoxins
are acting together.
But we know for sure that
domoic acid is measured
in the urine of these
animals and it is surely
impacting their health.
In March 2011,
in the same region,
six sea lions
were found dead and
175 tons of sardines
all perished at once
in Redondo Beach’s
King Harbor.
Again in both cases
it is thought domoic acid
played a role
in harming the wildlife.
One of the worst cases
of poisoning
in Southern California
was a period between
2002 and 2003 when
over 1,000 sea lions and
50 dolphins succumbed
to domoic acid.
Toxin-induced
abnormal behavior in
marine animals has been
observed for many years.
For instance,
some sea lions have
shown head waving,
bulging eyes,
mucus discharges
from the mouth,
disorientation and seizures.
Such symptoms often
precede the short-term
memory loss or
death of the animals.
This image here, we have
a California sea lion.
Now we see a section of
their brain and this is
one that’s gone through
an autopsy.
And then here
if we do a blow up of
the lower part of
the brain here, we can
see the hippocampus.
And on this first image
here, this shows a healthy,
normal brain of
a California sea lion
and the hippocampus
is totally intact and
presumably it would have
been functioning normally
in the healthy
growing animal.
But then when it’s
exposed to domoic acid,
and this is from an
animal that succumbed
to domoic acid poisoning,
you see the hippocampus
has been totally
degenerated.
So it no longer can really
function as an effective
organ in the brain.
The hippocampus
is largely responsible
for memory in mammals
and if the hippocampus
isn’t functional,
the memory capabilities
of an animal
are highly impaired.
In 1991, one of the first
incidences of domoic acid
poisoning occurred
on the outer
Washington (USA) coast.
In Monterey Bay (USA)
there were seabird
mortalities being observed.
These seabirds were
flying erratically,
they were hitting windows,
and there were
large numbers of them.
It was not understood
exactly what was happening,
but through
scientific research,
and further study, it was
then determined
the birds were feeding
on Pseudo-nitzschia,
or were feeding on the
fish that were feeding
on Pseudo-nitzschia,
and they became poisoned.
I think even more
recently we’ve noted that
sea lions and sea otters
are affected
by domoic acid toxicity.
Sea lions have even been
so disoriented that
they’ve ended up high
on beaches;
they’re resting
on police cars, they are
completely disoriented,
not knowing
where they are.
A typical symptom of
this poisoning is this
head-bobbing motion,
so they’re having severe
neurological damage.
Humans may experience
domoic acid poisoning
through consumption
of marine animals
and the results can range
from gastrointestinal
problems to death.
We’ve seen that
even humans have been
impacted by DA
(domoic acid),
that they lose their
short-term memory.
And some even have
long-term memory losses.
So it’s quite an issue here.
Now, four elderly people
died in Prince Edward
Island (Canada) in 1987.
And there’s been many
people that have been ill
in the United States,
on the west coast
of the Pacific (Ocean),
and on the Atlantic
(Ocean seaboard).
There's an example
of a physics professor
who was sickened
due to eating mussels in
the Prince Edward Island
event in 1987.
He can teach
his physics classes
but he can't remember
if he ate breakfast or
where he parked his car.
So it can have severe
consequences in people.
We sincerely thank you,
Drs. Vera Trainer
and Bill Cochlan,
for taking time from
your busy schedules
to speak with us about
harmful algal blooms
and their severe impact
on our vulnerable
marine ecosystems.
For more details on the
experts featured today,
please visit
the following websites:
Dr. Bill Cochlan
www.RTC.SFSU.edu/in_cochlan.htm
Dr. Vera Trainer
www.NMFS.NOAA.gov
Green viewers,
thank you for joining us
on our program.
Please watch
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
again next Wednesday
for the conclusion of
our two-part series
when we will examine
solutions to protect
marine animals from
harmful algal blooms.
May the guidance
of Providence
always be with us.
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