Friend --
Dr. Larry Brand is
a marine biology professor and algae research specialist at the
University of Miami in Coral Gables, FL. He has extensive knowledge of
red tide and cyanobacteria and has seen firsthand how the toxins
produced by algal blooms can devastate marine food webs.
From crabs, to fish, to apex
predators like dolphins, cyanobacterial toxins like microcystin and
BMAA travel up the food chain, their intensity becoming magnified as
they go. Dr. Brand has researched the levels of bioaccumulated toxins
found in animals from affected areas. His latest research, in
collaboration with neurologists and other marine biology researchers,
looks at the effects of a neurotoxin produced by
cyanobacteria, BMAA, on six dolphins that died after exposure to toxic
algae in the Indian River Lagoon. The results revealed BMAA in the brains of five of them, as
well as neuropathological changes comparable to human
neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s.
In a video available here, Brand
also described troubling behavior in dolphins in the Indian River
Lagoon, such as swimming upriver into freshwater lakes, confused and
lost, which may seem reminiscent of people struggling with dementia.
Our sentinel species may be providing a look at our own toxin exposure
and its consequences. Brand has seen enough to say he won’t eat any seafood caught in bodies of water
that get these blue-green algae blooms.
That includes Lake Okeechobee and
the estuaries its water is discharged into. As we enter the peak
of the Atlantic hurricane season, operational management that prioritizes
human health and safety right now--not years from now--is more
important than ever.
P.S. If you
can, please become a Bullsugar.org member
today to help us make human health and safety our
government's #1 priority.
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