Algal Blooms and Marine Biotoxins: 2002 Publications
Author:
Bourdelais,
A.J., Tomas, C.R., Naar, J., Kubanek, J., and Baden, D.G.
Title:
New fish-killing alga in coastal Delaware produces neurotoxins.
Publication: Environmental
Health Perspectives 110(5): 465-470, 2002.
© National Institute of Environmental
Health
Notes: Ten
fish mortality events, involving primarily Atlantic menhaden, occurred from
early July through September 2000 in several bays and creeks in Delaware,
USA. Two events involved large mortalities estimated at 1-2.5 million fish
in Bald Eagle Creek, Rehoboth Bay. Samples from Indian Inlet (Bethany Beach),
open to the Atlantic, as well as from an enclosed area of massive fish kills
at nearby Bald Eagle Creek and Torque Canal were collected and sent to our
laboratory for analysis. Microscopic examination of samples from the fish
kill site revealed the presence of a single-cell Raphidophyte alga Chattonella
cf. verruculosa at a maximum density of 1.04 x 10(7) cells/L. Naturally occurring
brevetoxins were also detected in the bloom samples. Besides the Chattonella
species, no other known brevetoxin-producing phytoplankton were present. Chromatographic,
immunochemical, and spectroscopic analyses confirmed the presence of brevetoxin
PbTx-2, and PbTx-3 and -9 were confirmed by chromatographic and immunochemical
analyses. This is the first confirmed report in the United States of brevetoxins
associated with an indigenous bloom in temperate Atlantic estuarine waters
and of C. cf. verruculosa as a resident toxic organism implicated in fish
kills in this area. The bloom of Chattonella continued throughout September
and eventually declined in October. By the end of October C. cf. verruculosa
was no longer seen, nor was toxin measurable in the surface waters. The results
affirm that to avoid deleterious impacts on human and ecosystem health, increased
monitoring is needed for brevetoxins and organism(s) producing them, even
in areas previously thought to be unaffected.
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