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Poisonous Plants, Fungi, and Algae

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Poisoning typically occurs when animals ingest whole cells ... dinoflagellates, especially Gymnodinium breve, Alexandrium spp, produce powerful ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Poisonous Plants, Fungi, and Algae


1
Poisonous Plants, Fungi, and Algae
  • Algal Toxins

2
Algal Blooms and Harmful Algal Blooms
3
Kingdom Monera
  • Cyanobacteria - blue green algae
  • Used as a food source Nostoc, Spirulina (since
    ancient times - today protein additive)
  • Toxins produced by several species can cause
    problems during blooms

4
Kingdom Protista
  • Six divisions of algae
  • Division Pyrrophyta - dinoflagellates
  • Division Chrysophyta - diatoms
  • Division Euglenophyta - euglenoids
  • Division Chlorophyta - green algae
  • Division Rhodophyta - red algae
  • Division Phaeophyta - brown algae

5
Toxic Cyanobacteria
  • Normally algal cells only release the toxins when
    the cells die or when they age and become leaky
  • Poisoning typically occurs when animals ingest
    whole cells
  • If water is treated to break up a bloom, it is
    possible for fatal levels of the toxin to be
    released
  • 12 genera of cyanobacteria known to be
    toxin-producers.
  • Two of the most toxic - Anabaena and Microcystis.

6
Types of toxins
  • Two groups of deadly toxins in the cyanobacteria
  • Neurotoxins - alkaloids - nervous systems
  • Anatoxins - Very Fast Death Factor 4 min bind
    to acetylchone receptors and cause respiratory
    paralysis
  • Saxitoxins neurological dysfunction and
    paralysis block sodium channels on neurons
    (also in some dinoflagellates)
  • Hepatotoxins - cyclopeptides - target the liver
  • Microcystins disrupt cytoskeleton in liver
    cause liver cells to collapse blood pools in
    liver causing fatalities may also be
    carcinogenic
  • Other less deadly toxins swimmers itch

7
Anabaena
  • Anabaena - a genus of filamentous N2-fixing
    cyanobacteria
  • Known for producing a suite of cyanotoxins which
    range from the neurotoxic anatoxins and
    saxitoxins to the hepatotoxic microcystins.
  • Genus can be found throughout the world

8
Anabaena
9
Microcystis
  • Microcystis spp. are single-celled, colonial,
    freshwater cyanobacteria
  • World-wide distribution
  • Microcystins (hepatotoxins) are main toxin type
  • M. aeruginosa and M. viridis appear to be the
    most common microcystin-prodcuing species.

10
Microcystis
11
Dinoflagellates
  • Unicellular algae covered with cellulose plates
    giving an armored appearance
  • Important to the food chain in marine and fresh
    water
  • Some marine species cause Red Tides
  • Bloom conditions
  • Color the water red
  • Produce powerful toxins
  • Pfiesteria newly recognized problem

12
Dinoflagellates
13
Dinoflagellates and Red Tides
  • Several species of dinoflagellates, especially
    Gymnodinium breve, Alexandrium spp, produce
    powerful toxins that can cause massive fish kills
  • As schools of fish swim through a bloom, the
    dinoflagellates may be disrupted or killed,
    releasing neurotoxins into the water
  • The toxins damage the gills or suppress heart
    rate and result in asphyxiation - hundred or
    thousands of dead fish wash up on beaches

14
Other Problems
  • In other instances, the toxins accumulate in
    various filter feeding shellfish
  • When the shellfish are eaten the toxins can
    affect humans
  • Cause various syndromes depending on the
    dinoflagellate and type of toxin

15
Dinoflagellate Poisonings
  • Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) saxitoxin
  • Diarrhetic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP)
  • Neurotoxic Shellfish Poisoning (NSP) usually
    only fish kills
  • Ciguatera Fish Poisoning (CFP) GI,
    neurological, and cardiovascular symptoms from
    eating contaminated fish (fish not affected)
  • Pfiesteria piscicida recently identified problem

16
Pfiesteria piscicida
  • Pfiesteria piscicida implicated as the organism
    responsible for recent fish kills and fish
    disease
  • Since the early 1990s toxins produced by
    Pfiesteria may have killed over one billion fish
    in North Carolina alone with other outbreaks
    along east coast
  • Toxins not identified yet
  • People exposed to toxins have developed skin and
    neurological problems

17
Pfiesteria
  • Complex life cycle
  • Appears to be around 24 different stages in the
    life cycle with flagellated, amoeboid, and
    encysted stages
  • Only 3 stages appear to form toxins
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