I wonder if #Gambierdiscus is the cause? They have been testing for #RedTide, but have they been testing for Gambierdiscus?

Disoriented pelican found on Marco Island may have red tide poisoning, experts say

By CNN
May 23, 2024

A brown #pelican discovered on #MarcoIsland last week is presumed to have red tide poisoning, according to the Conservancy of Southwest Florida.

"'Typically, we first get the notion that red tide is around when birds are sick,' said Dr. Michael Parsons, of the Water School at Florida Gulf Coast University.

"The seabird was spotted disoriented on the beach, according to a release. Despite those symptoms, which are common with the #neurotoxic algae, no red tide has been detected in our area, per the Florida Department of Health in Collier County.

"'We have no signs of red tide around, FWC is aware of this situation and will be monitoring it more closely,' Parsons said."

Read more:
https://wsvn.com/news/local/florida/disoriented-pelican-found-on-marco-island-may-have-red-tide-poisoning-experts-say/

#ToxicAlgae #HABs #HarmfulAlgae #ciguatoxins #CFP

Disoriented pelican found on Marco Island may have red tide poisoning, experts say - WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale

MARCO ISLAND, Florida (WBBH) — A brown pelican discovered on Marco Island last week is presumed to have red tide poisoning, according to the Conservancy<a class="excerpt-read-more" href="https://wsvn.com/news/local/florida/disoriented-pelican-found-on-marco-island-may-have-red-tide-poisoning-experts-say/">Read More</a>

WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale

Six rare #sawfish deaths in 7 days have scientists baffled amid bizarre #Florida fish behavior

“There is no concrete, conclusive proof of what is happening yet and that is still to be determined, which is quite terrifying.” said Gregg Furstenwerth, a lifelong diver in the Florida Keys. “If it continues, it is going to be the end of this #ecosystem as we know it.”

By Jen Christensen, CNN

Published Apr 12, 2024

"Most tests for toxins have been negative, but scientists have seen an unusually high number of #algae called gambierdiscus that can produce a wide variety of #neurotoxins that can be harmful to fish and dangerous to humans.

#Gambierdiscus is normally found in tropical and subtropical waters all around the world, but the algae can grow quickly when waters are warmer than usual. The climate crisis has brought record hot temperatures to the waters around southern Florida."

Read more: https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/six-rare-sawfish-deaths-in-7-days-have-scientists-baffled-amid-bizarre-florida-fish-behavior/1640732

#SpinningFish #ClimateChange #WarmingOceans #OceanTemperatures #ToxicAlgae #SouthFlorida #WaterIsLife #OceanEcosystem #Collapse #EcosystemCollapse #Extinction #FishDeaths

#Gambierdiscus and Its Associated Toxins: A Minireview

The global spread of #CFP has led to Gambierdiscus and its toxins being considered an environmental and human health concern worldwide.

Da-Zhi Wang, et al.
July, 2022

"Gambierdiscus is a dinoflagellate genus widely distributed throughout tropical and subtropical regions. Some members of this genus can produce a group of potent polycyclic polyether #neurotoxins responsible for #ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP), one of the most significant food-borne illnesses associated with fish consumption. Ciguatoxins and #maitotoxins, the two major toxins produced by Gambierdiscus, act on voltage-gated channels and TRPA1 receptors, consequently leading to poisoning and even death in both humans and animals. Over the past few decades, the occurrence and geographic distribution of CFP have undergone a significant expansion due to intensive #anthropogenic activities and global #ClimateChange, which results in more human illness, a greater public health impact, and larger economic losses. The global spread of CFP has led to Gambierdiscus and its toxins being considered an environmental and human health concern worldwide."

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35878223/

#Extinction #ToxicAlgae #Fish #ClimateCrisis #WarmingOceans #WaterIsLife #WaterTemperatures

Gambierdiscus and Its Associated Toxins: A Minireview - PubMed

<span><i>Gambierdiscus</i> is a dinoflagellate genus widely distributed throughout tropical and subtropical regions. Some members of this genus can produce a group of potent polycyclic polyether neurotoxins responsible for ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP), one of the most significant food-borne illnesses as</span> …

PubMed

WHOI: Harmful Algae: #Gambierdiscus

- Benthic dinoflagellate genus
- Over 18 defined species and several ribotypes identified
- Found globally in tropical and subtropical regions
- Produce #ciguatoxins, which may lead to:
• Human illness (Ciguatera Poisoning)
• Significant public health impacts
• Economic losses associated with health-related costs and lost productivity

"Taxonomic studies have identified at least 18 species within the Gambierdiscus genus, many of which co-occur and differ significantly in toxicity. At least ten of these species have been found in tropical and subtropical regions of the U.S., including #Hawaii, the #GulfOfMexico, the #FloridaKeys, #PuertoRico, and the #USVirginIslands.

"Temperature is a key factor controlling CTX occurrence, and laboratory experiments investigating the influence of temperature on growth of various Gambierdiscus species have shown that most species exhibit maximum growth rates between 24–30°C, but that growth responses varied by species. For example, temperature tolerances vary among species, although all are sensitive to higher temperatures, with steep declines in growth as temperatures exceed ~31°C.

"Thus higher temperatures may favor growth of more thermally tolerant species in ciguatera endemic regions, and promote establishment of species shown to be less tolerant in subtropical and temperate regions. Warm surface temperatures may also favor increased abundance of Gambierdiscus populations in deeper waters.

"There is recent evidence of geographic range expansion of #Gambierdiscus and CP into higher latitudes in U.S. waters, associated with climate-driven warming. Over the past two decades CP and CTXs were reported for the first time in the northern Gulf of Mexico, and ephemeral populations of Gambierdiscus have also been documented in #NorthCarolina. Prolonged periods of elevated water temperatures at these locations and in northern Florida are hypothesized to result in increased Gambierdiscus and Fukuyoa cell densities."

https://hab.whoi.edu/species/species-by-name/gambierdiscus/

#Extinction #ToxicAlgae
#Fish #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #WarmingOceans #WaterIsLife #WaterTemperatures

Gambierdiscus – Harmful Algal Blooms

Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future

Mark L. Wells, et al.
Sept 22, 2015

Abstract:
"Climate change pressures will influence marine planktonic systems globally, and it is conceivable that harmful algal blooms may increase in frequency and severity. These pressures will be manifest as alterations in temperature, stratification, light, ocean acidification, precipitation-induced nutrient inputs, and grazing, but absence of fundamental knowledge of the mechanisms driving harmful algal blooms frustrates most hope of forecasting their future prevalence. Summarized here is the consensus of a recent workshop held to address what currently is known and not known about the environmental conditions that favor initiation and maintenance of harmful algal blooms. There is expectation that harmful algal bloom (HAB) geographical domains should expand in some cases, as will seasonal windows of opportunity for harmful algal blooms at higher latitudes. Nonetheless there is only basic information to speculate upon which regions or habitats HAB species may be the most resilient or susceptible. Moreover, current research strategies are not well suited to inform these fundamental linkages. There is a critical absence of tenable hypotheses for how climate pressures mechanistically affect HAB species, and the lack of uniform experimental protocols limits the quantitative cross-investigation comparisons essential to advancement. A HAB “best practices” manual would help foster more uniform research strategies and protocols, and selection of a small target list of model HAB species or isolates for study would greatly promote the accumulation of knowledge. Despite the need to focus on keystone species, more studies need to address strain variability within species, their responses under multifactorial conditions, and the retrospective analyses of long-term plankton and cyst core data; research topics that are departures from the norm. Examples of some fundamental unknowns include how larger and more frequent extreme weather events may break down natural biogeographic barriers, how stratification may enhance or diminish HAB events, how trace nutrients (metals, vitamins) influence cell toxicity, and how grazing pressures may leverage, or mitigate HAB development. There is an absence of high quality time-series data in most regions currently experiencing HAB outbreaks, and little if any data from regions expected to develop HAB events in the future. A subset of observer sites is recommended to help develop stronger linkages among global, national, and regional climate change and HAB observation programs, providing fundamental datasets for investigating global changes in the prevalence of harmful algal blooms. Forecasting changes in HAB patterns over the next few decades will depend critically upon considering harmful algal blooms within the competitive context of plankton communities, and linking these insights to ecosystem, oceanographic and climate models. From a broader perspective, the nexus of HAB science and the social sciences of harmful algal blooms is inadequate and prevents quantitative assessment of impacts of future HAB changes on human well-being. These and other fundamental changes in HAB research will be necessary if HAB science is to obtain compelling evidence that climate change has caused alterations in HAB distributions, prevalence or character, and to develop the theoretical, experimental, and empirical evidence explaining the mechanisms underpinning these ecological shifts."

Mention of Gembierdiscus:

"#Gambierdiscus toxicus is known to generally favor warmer conditions, and increased ciguatera fish poisoning has been observed with elevated sea surface temperatures related to El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) (Rongo and van Woesik, 2011). But this linkage is correlative, rather than determined, and temperature optima differ substantially among different Gambierdiscus species or phylotypes (Yoshimatsu et al., 2014). The cell-size dependent population response to warming also differs among phytoplankton groups. Specifically, picophytoplankton biomass appears to increase with temperature, unlike non-cyanobacterial communities which tend to respond in the opposite (Karlberg and Wulff, 2013; Morán et al., 2010). Despite this, unusual blooms of both may be linked to climatic events (Gómez and Souissi, 2007)."

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4800334/

#HABs #HarmfulAlgaeBlooms #GambierdiscusToxicus #Florida #Extinction #ToxicAlgae #Fish #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #WarmingOceans #WaterIsLife #WaterTemperatures

Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future

Climate change pressures will influence marine planktonic systems globally, and it is conceivable that harmful algal blooms may increase in frequency and severity. These pressures will be manifest as alterations in temperature, stratification, light, ...

PubMed Central (PMC)

Fish are dying in the #FloridaKeys. Scientists are getting closer to finding out why

By Heather Walker
March 12, 2024

"The Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission says 27 species are now affected, primarily in the lower keys from #BigPine to #KeyWest, including the critically #endangered smalltooth #sawfish. Many have grounded themselves. As of last week, 20 have died."

Full article:
https://wsvn.com/news/investigations/fish-are-dying-in-the-florida-keys-scientists-are-getting-closer-to-finding-out-why/

#HABs #HarmfulAlgaeBlooms #Gambierdiscus #Florida #Extinction #ToxicAlgae
#Fish #Florida #ClimateChange
#ClimateCrisis #WarmingOceans
#WaterIsLife #WaterTemperatures

Fish are dying in the Florida Keys. Scientists are getting closer to finding out why - WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale

(WSVN) - Scientists want to know what is going on in the waters off the Florida Keys. That’s because fish there are behaving strangely and<a class="excerpt-read-more" href="https://wsvn.com/news/investigations/fish-are-dying-in-the-florida-keys-scientists-are-getting-closer-to-finding-out-why/">Read More</a>

WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale

So, when I saw this on the news today, the first thing I thought of was #HABs (#HarmfulAlgaeBlooms). Seems that might be the culprit. Not good...

In Florida Keys, researchers investigate fish 'spinning and whirling' before dying

March 29, 2024
by Ehren Wynder
"A likely suspect is a naturally occurring toxin produced by an algae called #Gambierdiscus. Researchers detected elevated levels of it in areas with affected fish, as well as in the gut contents of some affected fish.

"The toxin is commonly found to accumulate on fish in #CoralReefs where the algae is found, It is not typically dangerous to the fish, but can be dangerous and even lethal to humans.

"Parsons said its presence was 'anywhere from five times higher to about 30 times above averages we've seen over the past 10 years.'

"'The maximum numbers we saw were below 10,000 cells per liter of water,' he said. 'That (number) is a lot for Gambierdiscus, but it's not a lot in terms of our typical blooming species. So that's one reason why Gambierdiscus was kind of under the radar here.'

"The link between Gambierdiscus and the spinning fish has not yet been proven, but scientists are chasing it as their strongest lead.

"The BTT and FWC recommend people avoid eating fish harvested from areas where affected fish have been observed and to avoid swimming in areas with dead and symptomatic fish."

Full article:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/in-florida-keys-researchers-investigate-fish-spinning-and-whirling-before-dying/ar-BB1kLYxi

#Extinction #ToxicAlgae #Fish #Florida #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #WarmingOceans #WaterIsLife #WaterTemperatures

MSN