Toxins and Harmful Algal Blooms Science Team
The Team Studies the Factors that Contribute to Algal Toxin Production, Release, and Outbreaks
The Team Identifies Algal Toxins in Surface Waters
Cyanobacterial Bloom on Lake Okeechobee, Florida
The Team Identifies Cyanobacteria Associated with Toxin Production
Gleotrichia shown under a microscope
The Team Advances Method, Sensor, and Model Development
to provide decision support and advanced warning
The Team Improves the Understanding of Algal Toxin Uptake
and if uptake results in adverse effects on wildlife
The Team Develops Advanced Analytical Capabilities
The team develops advanced methods to study factors driving algal toxin production, how and where wildlife or humans are exposed to toxins, and ecotoxicology. That information is used to develop decision tools to understand if toxin exposure leads to adverse health effects in order to protect human and wildlife health.
Algal blooms frequently occur in our Nation's water resources and can cause economic, ecologic, and human health concerns. Algal blooms often contain cyanobacteria and other microorganisms, which can produce natural toxins. Yet, the actual health threats posed to the public, pets, livestock, and wildlife by these toxins in water resources used for recreation and drinking water remain poorly understood. Consequently, in order to be protective from potential health risks, rapid decisions are often made by land managers, public utilities and others to limit access to water resources for recreation or drinking water. These decisions are often based largely on a perception of potential risk.
The U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Toxins and Harmful Algal Blooms Research Team works with multiple stakeholders to quantify toxin exposure and effects, identify hazards and vulnerabilities, develop tools to quantify and forecast toxin occurrence and exposure, and estimate socioeconomic impacts. Knowledge gained is used to identify actual versus perceived health risks posed by natural toxins. The team’s approach for understanding health impacts of algal toxins on humans and wildlife is a sequential process where each step informs the next in the laboratory and in the field. This approach involves teams of USGS scientists working at field sites across the United States, and in collaboration with other scientists to address human and wildlife health concerns.
Current Science Activities
- Toxin Exposure and Effects
- Determining the effects of cyanotoxins in fish and birds, including, cyanotoxin induced endocrine disruption, sublethal effects, and immunomodulation effects
- Determining bioaccessibility of cyanotoxins from ambient waters, finished drinking water, and raw and cooked fish in simulated mammalian digestive systems
- Evaluating the potential exposure risk of cyanotoxins in tap waters in the United States
- Dose-dependent animal toxicity studies for cyanotoxins and in relation to health advisory thresholds
- Biomarkers and cellular response to acute and chronic cyanotoxin exposure and potential proactive response measures
- Cyanotoxin and algal blooms related health impacts on reserved Federal lands and U.S. Trust species
- Potential for cyanotoxin aerosolization and human health effects (collaboration with CDC)
- Causes, Control, and Fate of Toxin Production
- Evaluation of commercial personal drinking water purifiers for toxin removal
- Understanding cyanotoxin production and control dynamics
- The response of harmful algae to atmospheric stimuli and implication for ecosystem and human health
- Advancing Methods and Sensors to Support Toxin Studies
- Validation of a method for simultaneously measuring multiple classes of cyanotoxins and algal toxins in surface waters across the freshwater to marine continuum
- Cyanobacteria Assessment Network (CyAN): Detection of cyanobacterial blooms and potential toxin production in lakes and reservoirs
- Polyphasic identification of toxin producing cyanobacteria
- Assessment of physical and chemical properties of cyanotoxins
- Decision Support
- Identification and quantitation of cyanotoxin socioeconomic effects
Below are other science teams and laboratories associated with this project.
The following are the data releases from this science team’s research activities.
Related publications below.
A review on cylindrospermopsin: the global occurrence, detection, toxicity and degradation of a potent cyanotoxin
Initial results from a reconnaissance of cyanobacteria and associated toxins in Illinois, August--October 2012
Relations between DNA- and RNA-based molecular methods for cyanobacteria and microcystin concentration at Maumee Bay State Park Lakeside Beach, Oregon, Ohio, 2012
Water samples were collected from Maumee Bay State Park Lakeside Beach, Oregon, Ohio, during the 2012 recreational season and analyzed for selected cyanobacteria gene sequences by DNA-based quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and RNA-based quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Results from the four DNA assays (for quantifying total cyanobacteria, total M
Fate and transport of cyanobacteria and associated toxins and taste-and-odor compounds from upstream reservoir releases in the Kansas River, Kansas, September and October 2011
Microphotographs of cyanobacteria documenting the effects of various cell-lysis techniques
Effects of light and nutrients on seasonal phytoplankton succession in a temperate eutrophic coastal lagoon
Cyanotoxin mixtures and taste-and-odor compounds in cyanobacterial blooms from the midwestern united states
Comparison of two cell lysis procedures for recovery of microcystins in water samples from silver lake in Dover, Delaware, with microcystin producing cyanobacterial accumulations
Guidelines for design and sampling for cyanobacterial toxin and taste-and-odor studies in lakes and reservoirs
Below are news stories associated with this project.
The team develops advanced methods to study factors driving algal toxin production, how and where wildlife or humans are exposed to toxins, and ecotoxicology. That information is used to develop decision tools to understand if toxin exposure leads to adverse health effects in order to protect human and wildlife health.
Algal blooms frequently occur in our Nation's water resources and can cause economic, ecologic, and human health concerns. Algal blooms often contain cyanobacteria and other microorganisms, which can produce natural toxins. Yet, the actual health threats posed to the public, pets, livestock, and wildlife by these toxins in water resources used for recreation and drinking water remain poorly understood. Consequently, in order to be protective from potential health risks, rapid decisions are often made by land managers, public utilities and others to limit access to water resources for recreation or drinking water. These decisions are often based largely on a perception of potential risk.
The U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Toxins and Harmful Algal Blooms Research Team works with multiple stakeholders to quantify toxin exposure and effects, identify hazards and vulnerabilities, develop tools to quantify and forecast toxin occurrence and exposure, and estimate socioeconomic impacts. Knowledge gained is used to identify actual versus perceived health risks posed by natural toxins. The team’s approach for understanding health impacts of algal toxins on humans and wildlife is a sequential process where each step informs the next in the laboratory and in the field. This approach involves teams of USGS scientists working at field sites across the United States, and in collaboration with other scientists to address human and wildlife health concerns.
Current Science Activities
- Toxin Exposure and Effects
- Determining the effects of cyanotoxins in fish and birds, including, cyanotoxin induced endocrine disruption, sublethal effects, and immunomodulation effects
- Determining bioaccessibility of cyanotoxins from ambient waters, finished drinking water, and raw and cooked fish in simulated mammalian digestive systems
- Evaluating the potential exposure risk of cyanotoxins in tap waters in the United States
- Dose-dependent animal toxicity studies for cyanotoxins and in relation to health advisory thresholds
- Biomarkers and cellular response to acute and chronic cyanotoxin exposure and potential proactive response measures
- Cyanotoxin and algal blooms related health impacts on reserved Federal lands and U.S. Trust species
- Potential for cyanotoxin aerosolization and human health effects (collaboration with CDC)
- Causes, Control, and Fate of Toxin Production
- Evaluation of commercial personal drinking water purifiers for toxin removal
- Understanding cyanotoxin production and control dynamics
- The response of harmful algae to atmospheric stimuli and implication for ecosystem and human health
- Advancing Methods and Sensors to Support Toxin Studies
- Validation of a method for simultaneously measuring multiple classes of cyanotoxins and algal toxins in surface waters across the freshwater to marine continuum
- Cyanobacteria Assessment Network (CyAN): Detection of cyanobacterial blooms and potential toxin production in lakes and reservoirs
- Polyphasic identification of toxin producing cyanobacteria
- Assessment of physical and chemical properties of cyanotoxins
- Decision Support
- Identification and quantitation of cyanotoxin socioeconomic effects
Below are other science teams and laboratories associated with this project.
The following are the data releases from this science team’s research activities.
Related publications below.
A review on cylindrospermopsin: the global occurrence, detection, toxicity and degradation of a potent cyanotoxin
Initial results from a reconnaissance of cyanobacteria and associated toxins in Illinois, August--October 2012
Relations between DNA- and RNA-based molecular methods for cyanobacteria and microcystin concentration at Maumee Bay State Park Lakeside Beach, Oregon, Ohio, 2012
Water samples were collected from Maumee Bay State Park Lakeside Beach, Oregon, Ohio, during the 2012 recreational season and analyzed for selected cyanobacteria gene sequences by DNA-based quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and RNA-based quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Results from the four DNA assays (for quantifying total cyanobacteria, total M
Fate and transport of cyanobacteria and associated toxins and taste-and-odor compounds from upstream reservoir releases in the Kansas River, Kansas, September and October 2011
Microphotographs of cyanobacteria documenting the effects of various cell-lysis techniques
Effects of light and nutrients on seasonal phytoplankton succession in a temperate eutrophic coastal lagoon
Cyanotoxin mixtures and taste-and-odor compounds in cyanobacterial blooms from the midwestern united states
Comparison of two cell lysis procedures for recovery of microcystins in water samples from silver lake in Dover, Delaware, with microcystin producing cyanobacterial accumulations
Guidelines for design and sampling for cyanobacterial toxin and taste-and-odor studies in lakes and reservoirs
Below are news stories associated with this project.