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Algae Turn Fish into a Lethal Lunch.


To sea lions, an anchovy represents little more than a bite of dinner. In a strange turn of events, microscopic algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that  have enabled some anchovies anchovies

a cause of diarrhea, vomiting, salivation, lacrimation, depression, miosis, polypnea, tachycardia, hypothermia in cats.
 to bite back--albeit posthumously.

A new study establishes for the first time that fish that dine on a particular plantlike floating diatom diatom (dī`ətŏm', -tōm'), unicellular organism of the kingdom Protista, characterized by a silica shell of often intricate and beautiful sculpturing. Most diatoms exist singly, although some join to form colonies. , an alga, can become a dietary time bomb for mammals higher up the food chain.

Scientists had considered diatoms diatoms

a series of unicellular algae, microscopic in size, with cell walls containing silica. Members of the family Diatomaceae. Their remains accumulate as geological deposits and are mined. See diatomaceous earth.
 benign until a 1987 bloom of Pseudo-nitzschia australis off Canada's Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island, province (2001 pop. 135,294), 2,184 sq mi (5,657 sq km), E Canada, off N.B. and N.S. Geography


One of the Maritime Provinces, Prince Edward Island lies in the Gulf of St.
. Some 140 people who ate mussels that had accumulated these algae from the water fell victim to a strange neurotoxicity. Three died. Many who survived still suffer from an Alzheimer's-like loss of short-term memory.

Pathologists quickly linked this shellfish poisoning to domoic acid, an amino acid produced by the algae. Pseudonitzschia blooms were later tied to several suspicious wildlife events--from marine mammal strandings and deaths to seemingly drunk pelicans falling from the sky. No one, however, proved the alga's toxin was to blame.

Now in the Jan. 6 NATURE, Christopher A. Scholin of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) is a not-for-profit oceanographic research center in Moss Landing, California affiliated with the Monterey Bay Aquarium. It was founded in 1987 by David Packard of Hewlett-Packard fame.  in Moss Landing, Calif., and his colleagues offer unambiguous evidence tying the toxic diatom to the deaths of more than 400 sea lions during May and June of 1998.

When the animals' initial seizures suggested a neurotoxin, Scholin's team homed in on the sea lions' diet--anchovies--and found the fish loaded with toxin-producing Pseudo-nitzschia. Autopsies showed the dead sea lions had brain lesions characteristic of mice and monkeys poisoned by domoic acid. The final link, Scholin says, was his team's documentation of the silicon-based skeletons of Pseudo-nitzschia in feces of affected sea lions and domoic acid in the animals' urine, feces, and serum.

This "is a beautiful sleuthing job," observes Pat Tester of the U.S. National Ocean Service in Beaufort, N.C. Though many studies pointed to a wildlife threat from Pseudo-nitzschia, she says, this study offers "the smoking gun."

It's also disturbing, maintains Paul R. Epstein of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.  in Boston, because "it shows that the harmful alga can sneak up on us in a new way." Many organizations currently screen shellfish to monitor for domoic acid risks to people, he notes. The poisoning of sea lions by apparently healthy fish, he says, suggests that health authorities need to look beyond shellfish.

Scholin agrees, noting that the 1998 Pseudo-nitzschia bloom that led to the sea lion kill reached only 100,000 cells per liter of seawater--one-tenth the density associated with shellfish risks to people. To detect algae in water before the diatom gets into shellfish, his lab has been working with Saigene Corp. of Bothell, Wash., to test for algal algal

pertaining to or caused by algae.


algal infection
is very rare but systemic and udder infections are recorded. See protothecosis.

algal mastitis
the algae Prototheca trispora and P.
 DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
.

When blooms of Pseudo-nitzschia or any of two other classes of harmful algae are present, a test chemical turns blue. An experimental remote-sampling system that relies on this assay is set to undergo tests this summer.

With a coastal network of such sensors deployed on buoys, Scholin says, scientists could scout for potentially dangerous blooms by querying instruments from shore. His goal is to adapt these systems so that, on command, they can assay and report back concentrations of algal toxins rather than of algae.

That's important, notes JoAnn M. Burkholder of North Carolina State University History

Main article: History of North Carolina State University
The North Carolina General Assembly founded NC State on March 7, 1887 as a land-grant college under the name North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts.
 in Raleigh, because algae--including Pseudo-nitzschia--can be quite variable in their production of toxin. For reasons that are not well understood, she observes, "they appear to make more toxin at some points in their life cycle. And sometimes they just turn toxin production off."
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Article Details
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Author:Raloff, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 8, 2000
Words:580
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