Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8885672 | Harmful Algae | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
A case study of a toxic event (August 2004) revealed that P. australis and P. pungens were present at multiple inshore and offshore stations, coincident with fish (pilchard) and bird mortalities reported from the central part of Namibia. Toxin analyses (LC-MS/MS) of samples collected from June to August 2004 revealed the presence of particulate domoic acid (DA) in seawater at multiple stations (maximum â¼180â¯ngâ¯DA/L) in the >0.45â¯Î¼m size-fraction, as well as detectable DA (0.12â¯Î¼g DA/g) in the gut of one of two pilchard samples tested. These findings indicate that DA may have been associated with the fish and bird mortalities reported from this event in the nBUS. However, the co-occurrence of very high biomass phytoplankton blooms suggests that other explanations may be possible.
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Authors
Deon C. Louw, Gregory J. Doucette, Nina Lundholm,