Friend --
“This is a health issue... we, as Floridians, need to be
very concerned.“
Calls for serious attention to
public health impacts from harmful algae blooms are on the rise and
warnings like this one take on a new sense of urgency when they come
from someone like Dr. Deborah Mash.
As a neuroscientist and professor,
her latest research, in collaboration with Dr. Larry Brand and other
marine biologists, examines a possible connection between signs of neurodegenerative
disease in dolphins and humans. Throughout many years of research, Dr. Mash
has found concentrations of BMAA--the same amino acid present in the green slime that chokes
coastal community waterways in years with discharges from Lake
Okeechobee--in the brains of
dolphins, sharks, a variety of smaller marine species, and in people.
That evidence has led her to believe that human consumption of some
aquatic creatures may result in adverse effects to our
brains.
In a new video available here, Dr. Mash cautions Floridians to acknowledge
increasing evidence that points to biomagnification of toxins in the
marine food web. Her contributing research adds one more layer of
scientific evidence encouraging leaders to make water management
decisions right now that prioritize human health and
safety.
Want to know more? Join us!
Save the date to
join the Calusa Waterkeeper, Friends of the Everglades and Bullsugar
for a Miami premiere of the documentary "Troubled Waters,” on October
24th at the Silverspot Cinema. The ground-breaking documentary
explores the public health impacts and emerging medical science of
harmful algal blooms. An expert panel discussion with environmental
and health experts featured in the film will follow the
screening.
Don’t wait! Buy your tickets today: https://silverspot.net/films?Date=10/24/2019
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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