{"id":9297,"date":"2016-12-19T13:25:38","date_gmt":"2016-12-19T18:25:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/currents\/?p=9297"},"modified":"2024-05-21T15:54:11","modified_gmt":"2024-05-21T19:54:11","slug":"toxic-marine-snow-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/toxic-marine-snow-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Toxic Marine Snow"},"content":{"rendered":"
The algae <\/em>Pseudo-nitzschia lives in coastal waters worldwide. Photo courtesy Astrid Schnetzer.<\/em><\/p>\n Under the right conditions, ordinarily diminutive algae can form a slimy blanket over large swaths of coastal water and cost communities millions of dollars. These harmful algal blooms are increasing in frequency and magnitude all over the world, largely due to nutrient pollution.<\/p>\n Too much algae can disrupt food webs, lead to low oxygen conditions and fish kills, and, if the bloom-forming species is toxic, result in food-web contamination. Algae serve as a food source for a variety of marine organisms, and food-web transfer<\/a> of the toxin regularly affects sea birds and marine mammals.<\/p>\n Consuming toxin-laden shellfish or fish also can cause diseases in humans like amnesic shellfish poisoning. The algae known to cause amnesic shellfish poisoning<\/a>, Pseudo-nitzschia<\/em>, is found ubiquitously in our oceans.<\/p>\n Amnesic shellfish poisoning is best documented off the West Coast where one of the largest and most toxic events on record happened in 2015. Scientists know from deep-water particle collection that benthic organisms living several hundreds of meters below the blooms on the seafloor can also become toxic but we weren\u2019t quite sure of the mechanisms involved.<\/p>\nStory by Astrid Schnetzer<\/h3>\n