UW News

September 29, 2016

Ocean conditions contributed to unprecedented 2015 toxic algal bloom

UW News

A study led by researchers at the University of Washington and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration connects the unprecedented West Coast toxic algal bloom of 2015 that closed fisheries from southern California to northern British Columbia to the unusually warm ocean conditions — nicknamed “the blob” — in winter and spring of that year.

map with animal icons

A map showing impacts of the 2015 West Coast toxic algal bloom. Orange mammal symbols were detected with domoic acid, while those colored red also showed symptoms of poisoning. The numbers indicate how many mammals were affected. Shaded and hatched regions show closures for anchovy fisheries, offshore Dungeness and rock crab fishing, and shellfish harvesting.NOAA's Northwest Fisheries Science Center

“We have toxic algae events that result in shellfish closures off the Washington and Oregon coast every three to five years or so, but none of them have been as large as this one,” said lead author Ryan McCabe, a research scientist at the UW’s Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean, a collaborative center with NOAA. “This one was entirely different, and our results show that it was connected to the unusual ocean conditions.”

The study is now online in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

“This paper is significant because it identifies a link between ocean conditions and the magnitude of the toxic bloom in 2015 that resulted in the highest levels of domoic acid contamination in the food web ever recorded for many species,” said co-author Kathi Lefebvre, a marine biologist at NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center. “This is an eye-opener for what the future may hold as ocean conditions continue to warm globally.”

long chains of cells

A magnified image of Pseudo-nitzschia australis, which dominated the 2015 bloom.C. Wingert/Cochlan Ecophysiology Lab/ San Francisco State University

The authors found that the 2015 harmful algal bloom, which set records for its spatial extent and the level of toxicity, was dominated by a single species of diatom, Pseudo-nitzschia australis, normally found farther south off California.

Warm water not only allowed this species to survive, it also created an environment favoring its growth. By early 2015 the warm “blob” had moved toward shore and spread all along the West Coast. Warmer water creates less dense surface water that is more likely to stay floating on the surface, where it can become depleted in nutrients.

Previous laboratory studies by co-author William Cochlan of San Francisco State University showed that P. australis can take up nitrogen very quickly from a variety of sources, and appear to outcompete other, nontoxic phytoplankton in nutrient-depleted warm water.

For the new study, Cochlan’s lab performed experiments with P. australis from the 2015 bloom. They showed that when these cells experience warmer temperatures and get more nutrients they can double or triple their cell division rates, allowing them to potentially bloom into a large population fairly quickly at sea.

“When springtime shifts in wind direction brought deeper, nutrient-rich water upward near the coast, a small population of P. australis became a big population, which was then washed ashore along the West Coast by late spring storms,” said co-author Barbara Hickey, a UW professor of oceanography.

This was especially damaging in a year dominated by P. australis.

jar with brown liquid

A plankton net tow sampled in summer 2015 near Point Conception, California is brown with Pseudo-nitzschia algae cells.Anthony Odell/University of Washington

“This species is almost always highly toxic,” said co-author Raphael Kudela, a marine ecologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. “It blooms every spring off California, and there are frequently marine mammal impacts. But to see P. australis up and down the coast like this was unprecedented.”

Toxic algae come in many forms, but off the West Coast the major health and economic threat comes from various Pseudo-nitzschia species which can, under certain conditions, produce domoic acid, which can cause gastrointestinal distress, seizures, memory loss and even death.

Toxins can accumulate in razor clams and mussels, making them unsafe for human consumption. But the effects in the ecosystem are more widespread and long-lasting. Shellfish and anchovies containing toxins can get eaten by marine mammals and birds. If toxic algae settle to the ocean floor, they also can get eaten by bottom-dwelling animals like crabs, which then become unsafe to eat.

In late May 2015, a sea lion was found convulsing on a Washington beach, and domoic acid was identified in its feces.

“That’s something we’d never seen before in Washington, and when we heard this news we knew something huge was going on,” said co-author Vera Trainer, a research oceanographer at NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center.

That year saw the largest geographic extent of marine mammal impacts ever recorded.

The UW participated in a NOAA-led cruise in June 2015 that sampled water from southern California up to Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The new study includes those observations, collected near the end of the Washington bloom, as well as other ongoing beach monitoring and water sampling efforts that filter seawater to see the life it contains.

Researchers at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center examined the water samples under a high-resolution scanning electron microscope to identify the species present.

“As we started getting more and more of the samples that coincided with the peaks in the razor clam toxicity, it was quite clear that P. australis was the dominant species all along the coast,” Trainer said.

State resource managers have been collecting shellfish to monitor for toxins for decades. Out on the water, samples collected by the Olympic Region Harmful Algal Blooms Partnership and other efforts have also contributed to a 25-year record of toxic algae events.

The new paper compares the history of toxins in razor clams to indices of ocean climate variability, and finds a connection with El Niño and the longer-term Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

“There’s a significant connection there,” McCabe said.  “The toxic events also tend to coincide with previously established marine ecosystem shifts. We had not made that connection before, and I think it’s fascinating.”

Ocean climate cycles could help understand and better predict the emergence of toxic algal blooms. And while the blob was a one-time event that was not due to global warming, it provides a window into what climate change might look like.

“Species like Pseudo-nitzchia are extremely well-poised to take advantage of background warming,” McCabe said. “Pseudo-nitzchia are always out there along our coast. The fact that they are almost engineered to take advantage of situations like this — warm temperatures and low nutrients — that is concerning.”

A new grant from NOAA will allow the UW to develop a “weather forecast” for Washington and Oregon toxic algal blooms

He recommends more monitoring of harmful algal blooms, through collecting shellfish and water samples on the coast and offshore to see whether toxins or toxin-producing algae are present, and if so, which species.

“Without stably funded programs like that, we’re just going to be blind,” McCabe said.

Other co-authors are Richard Thomson at Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans; Frances Gulland at The Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, California; and Nicolaus Adams and Brian Bill at NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center.

The research was primarily funded by NOAA’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science’s Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research. Additional funding was provided by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and COAST through SFSU.

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For more information, contact McCabe at 206-685-0599 or rmccabe@ocean.washington.edu, Trainer at vera.l.trainer@noaa.gov or after Oct. 3 at 206-860-6788, and Lefebvre at 206-302-2454 or kathi.lefebvre@noaa.gov.

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