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Dangerous Marine Organisms

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Dangerous Marine Organisms Protistans and Invertebrates Outline Algae Sponges Cnidarians Mollusks Algae: Red Tide Red Tides occur in and around the US as well as ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dangerous Marine Organisms


1
Dangerous Marine Organisms
  • Protistans and Invertebrates

2
Outline
  • Algae
  • Sponges
  • Cnidarians
  • Mollusks

3
Algae Red Tide
  • Red Tides occur in and around the US as well as
    other areas of the world
  • Occasionally, the algae grow very fast or "bloom"
    and accumulate into dense, visible patches near
    the surface of the water.
  • These blooms often appear red in color
  • The term is a misnomer nothing to do with tides

4
Algae are Protist
  • Simple plant like organisms - autotrophs
  • Often single celled, but some are multi -
    cellular
  • Marine, freshwater and terrestrial
  • Dinoflagellates are often associated with blooms

5
Dinoflagellates
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rurlhttp//www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artsep01
/dinof.htmltypeno2tt935
6
Algae Life Cycle
http//www.whoi.edu/redtide/whathabs/whathabs.html
7
California Noctiluca Bloom
8
HABs
  • HAB refers to bloom phenomenon that contain
    toxins or that cause negative impacts (Harmful
    Algae Blooms)
  • These toxins are neurotoxins and they may cause
    the death of fish, birds and even humans

9
Organisms Affected
http//www.whoi.edu/redtide/foodweb/HABfoodweb.htm
l
10
Shell We Do Lunch?
1990 six fisherman almost died after eating
steamed mussels (Georges Bank)
11
Alexandrium
  • This blooming algae produces a neurotoxin
  • Clams, mussels and other filter feeders
    concentrate the toxin.
  • Toxin causes the paralysis of the diaphragm
    muscles.asphyxiation may result
  • Coast Guard air lifted the fisherman ashore
  • They were hospitalized, but recovered in a few
    days. Soon back fishing.

12
Fish Kills due to Harmful Algal Blooms
Florida Beach Covered with Red Tide Killed Fish
13
Marine Mammals Die
1991 Cape Cod 14 Humpback Whales Die from
Saxitoxins in Mackeral
14
Where Do They Occur in US?
15
Why Do HABs Occur?
  • No clear answer
  • Some evidence that pollution may cause HABs
  • Other studies indicate pollution not a major
    factor
  • Some hypothesize that increased monitoring of
    marine waters turns up cases that would otherwise
    be missed.

16
Ciguatera (CFP) - 1
  • CFP produces gastrointestinal, neurological, and
    cardiovascular symptoms. Generally, diarrhea,
    vomiting, and abdominal pain occur initially,
    followed by neurological dysfunction including
    reversal of temperature sensation, muscular
    aches, dizziness, anxiety, sweating, and a
    numbness and tingling of the mouth and digits.

17
Ciguatera and Reef Fish
  • Ciguatera results from the eating of reef fish
    affected with ciguatoxin. Ciguatoxin originates
    from a dinoflagellate name Gambierdiscus toxicus
    which colonizes coral beds. The toxin first
    affects the coral-grazing fish and is then passed
    up and through the food chain to the piscivorous
    fish (i.e., snapper, grouper, amberjack,
    barracuda) and finally to man. The toxin is not
    affected by either cooking or freezing, and the
    affected fish, cooked or raw, is not tainted by
    bacteria in any way. Typically, the victim
    states, "It was the best fish I ever tasted."

18
Some History
  • Ciguatera symptoms were first described in the
    1500's by the Spanish explorers to Cuba and were
    attributed to the ingestion of a small snail
    which they called cigua.
  • In the Pacific, the first Tahitian death on the
    ship Bounty (of the famous Mutiny on the Bounty)
    was the ship's surgeon after a fish feast "Old
    Bacchus died not of drink, as might have been
    supposed, but of eating a poisonous fish.
  • http//www.rehablink.com/ciguatera/poison.htm

19
Ciguatera (CFP) - 2
  • causative organisms Gambierdiscus toxicus,
    Prorocentrum spp., Ostreopsis spp., Coolia
    monotis, Thecadinium sp. and Amphidinium carterae
  • toxins produced Ciguatoxin/Maitotoxin
  • Avoid eating tropical reef fish
  • No cure
  • http//www.whoi.edu/redtide/illness/illness.htmlC
    iguatera20Fish20Poisoning

20
Fire Sponge
Body Smooth, soft, with wide irregular lobes,
few large pores bright red or orange. Colonial
encrusts on rocks, corals, mangrove roots.
Caution causes severe rashes and
blisters.Habitat Low-tide line to 50 deep
bays, lagoons.Range Throughout region
(Florida, Bahamas, and the Caribbean). .
http//www.enature.com/fieldguide/showRguide.asp?r
guideID711speciesID4738
21
The Cnidaria
  • Jellyfish, corals and their relatives
  • Almost all species are marine
  • All contain stinging cells (nematocysts)
  • Very few species are" dangerous
  • Two basic body forms polyp and medusa

22
Australia's box jellyfish
http//www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cnidaria/cubozoa.html
23
Chironex fleckeri
About 100 deaths during the past century Native
to the marine system of Northern Australia
Many have survived encounters with Chironex
Death may result when stung by 6-8 meters
of tentacles.
24
Portuguese Man-o-war
  • Fatal Portuguese man-o'-war (Physalia physalis)
    envenomation.Stein MR, Marraccini JV,
    Rothschild NE, Burnett JW.Office of the Medical
    Examiner, West Palm Beach, Florida.A fatal case
    of Physalia physalis (Portuguese man-o'-war)
    envenomation occurred on the Florida Atlantic
    coast in 1987. Despite appropriate beachside
    first aid, the patient was conscious only several
    minutes before having primary respiratory arrest
    and, later, cardiovascular collapse that resulted
    in death. Discharged nematocysts were still
    visible on the injured stratum corneum five days
    after envenomation. Additional treatment
    maneuvers suggested by this case include testing
    the tentacle fragments found on the victim's skin
    before their removal to ensure that nematocyst
    firing has been counteracted. We document the
    first human fatality caused by P physalis
    envenomation.

25
Physalia
Physalia in composed of a colony of polyps
http//www.ibss.iuf.net/people/skryabin/neuston.ht
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26
Swimming Medusa Video
  • http//www.pbrc.hawaii.edu/bekesy/angel/video/alat
    a.html

Stinging Cell
(nematocyst)
27
Mollusks
  • Clams, mussels, snails, octopi and their
    relatives
  • Marine, freshwater, and terrestrial species
  • Shelled, have foot for locomotion
  • Clams and mussels are filter feeders
  • Many snails are predacious
  • All octopi are predators

28
Cone Shell
  • Marine reef dwelling snails
  • Predators (fish, snails, and worms)
  • Toxic harpoons
  • Toxin has medicinal properties
  • The active components of the venom are small
    peptides toxins, typically 12-30 amino acid
    residues

29
Cone Shells
30
Cone Shell
31
Cone Shell Radular Apparatus
Radula
32
Distribution
  • In the US Cone shells are indigenous to US
    waters, but travelers are not likely to encounter
    them (Gulf of Mexico and Florida Keys)
  • Internationally Thirty cases of human
    envenomation have been recorded from the
    Indo-Pacific region and Australia.

33
Envenomations
  • When envenomations occur in humans, usually
    to the hands or feet, the result is somewhat
    unpredictable. Minor envenomations cause pain,
    swelling, and localized numbness that often
    subsides within hours of onset. Serious
    envenomations are associated with a rapid
    progression of symptoms, including paralysis,
    respiratory arrest, cardiac failure, and death.
  • http//www.emedicine.com/med/topic1636.htm

34
Xenome (Pharmaceutical Company)
  • About Xen2174
  • Xen2174 is a synthetic drug modeled on a peptide
    isolated from the venom of a cone shell found on
    Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
  • Xen2174 is currently under preclinical
    development for the management of chronic pain.

35
Blue Ringed Octopus
http//www.earlham.edu/sheedjo/blue-ringedoctopus
.htm
36
Blue Ringed Octopus
  • Distributed from Japan to Australia
  • Common in tide pools and reefs
  • Small 200mm across
  • Very toxic (bite)
  • Tetrodotoxin (same as found in pufferfish and
    poison arrow frogs)
  • Neurotoxindumbness, paralysis, difficulty in
    breathingmay require ventilation

37
The Mystery of TTX
  • It was a mystery why such a diversity of
    unrelated organisms would all evolve the same
    toxin, until it was recently discovered that
    bacteria associated with many of these animals
    actually produce TTX. This is the case in
    blue-ringed octopuses. Their salivary glands
    harbor dense colonies of TTX-producing bacteria.
    The blue-rings have evolved a symbiotic
    relationship with the bacteria.
    http//www.nhm.ac.uk/hosted_sites/tcp/bluering2.ht
    ml
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