VIMS
reports intense and widespread algal blooms
Researchers
explore new tools to monitor scope and impacts
1
September, 2015
Water
sampling and aerial photography by researchers at William &
Mary's Virginia Institute of Marine Science show that the algal
blooms currently coloring lower Chesapeake Bay are among the most
intense and widespread of recent years.
VIMS
professor Kimberly Reece reports that water samples collected near
the mouth of the York River on August 17 contained up to 200,000
algal cells per milliliter, the densest concentration she has seen in
nearly 10 years of field sampling. A sample with a concentration of
even 1,000 algal cells per milliliter is visible to the naked eye and
considered dense enough to be called a bloom.
The
current blooms are dominated by a single-celled protozoan
called Alexandriummonilatum,
an algal species known to release toxins harmful to other marine
life, particularly larval shellfish and finfish. Since mid-August,
VIMS has received sporadic and localized reports of small numbers of
dead fish, oysters, and crabs from the lower York River and adjacent
Bay waters associated with nearby blooms, although a direct
cause/effect relationship has not been established for any of these
events.
Aerial
photography and water sampling by VIMS professor Wolfgang Vogelbein
between August 17th and 27th confirmed the blooms' intensity in the
lower York River, and revealed that they extended much farther up the
York River and out into Chesapeake Bay than previously reported. The
flyovers were facilitated by the Virginia Marine Resources
Commission.
"This
is new and important information," says Vogelbein, "as we
have never appreciated thatAlexandrium extends so far
into the mainstem of the Bay or so far up the York River." Bloom
patches in the mainstem reach from the York River to the mouth of the
Rappahannock River, across the Bay to within 3-4 miles of Cape
Charles, and as far south as the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel. The
bloom patches are most dense on the western side of the Bay, with
other areas experiencing less activity. "The main body of the
bloom is several miles off shore," says Vogelbein, "and
thus wasn't appreciated prior to the recent flyovers."
Alexandrium monilatum
is one of several species of harmful algae that are of emerging
concern in Chesapeake Bay. It was first conclusively detected in Bay
waters in 2007, when Reece and colleagues used microscopy and DNA
sequences to identify it as the dominant species of a bloom that
persisted for several weeks in the York River. There are generic
reports of Alexandrium in the Bay from the
mid-1940s, and specific reports of A. monilatum in
the mid-1960s, but none in the intervening decades.
The
recent sampling and aerial photography show that the epicenter of
the A. monilatumbloom is near the mouth of the York
River. Smaller, less dense patches are visible within Mobjack Bay and
its tributaries, the Back and Poquoson rivers, and near the mouth of
the James and Elizabeth rivers.
Reports
of algal blooms in the lower York River started around July 22nd. As
in recent years, the initial summer blooms began with concentrations
of the alga Cochlodinium polykrikoides, before shifting after 2-3
weeks into blooms dominated by A. monilatum. As of the
last week of August, the A. monilatum bloom in the
York River persists but has grown markedly less dense.
New
tools to better understand blooms and toxins
Monitoring
the scope and impacts of an algal bloom is notoriously difficult,
particularly in areas like Chesapeake Bay where tides, winds,
currents, and a convoluted shoreline combine to create blooms that
are both patchy and ephemeral.
A
further complication is that the blooms typically contain a changing
mix of algal species, some of which may or may not--depending on
environmental conditions--produce the toxins that transform an
innocuous algal aggregation into a harmful algal bloom or HAB.
"We
see high variation among our samples," says Reece, "even
between those that were collected from sites a few hundred yards
apart or taken from the same site a few hours apart."
To
better characterize local blooms and their potential impacts, Reece
and Vogelbein have recently joined with colleagues at VIMS and other
institutions to bring new tools and techniques to their efforts.
One
of these collaborations involves the use of Dataflow, a high-tech
instrument used to monitor water quality over large areas. Deployed
from a small boat operating at speeds up to 25 knots, Dataflow passes
surface water collected through a keel-mounted pipe past an array of
water-quality sensors that record dissolved oxygen, salinity,
temperature, turbidity, chlorophyll, and pH--all parameters that
relate to algal abundance.
In
mid-August, VIMS professor Iris Anderson teamed with colleagues Jen
Stanhope, Hunter Walker, and Gail Scott to run Dataflow through
several bloom patches in the lower York River. This was supplemented
by a simultaneous Dataflow run in the lower James River by colleagues
at Old Dominion University and the Hampton Roads Sanitation District.
Both teams are now comparing their sensor data with water samples
taken enroute to further explore potential links between water
quality and bloom characteristics.
The
Dataflow runs got a serendipitous boost from an ongoing study of
algal productivity by VIMS professor Mark Brush and post-doctoral
researcher Sam Lake. Their monthly sampling of photosynthesis and
respiration in the York River happened to take place on the same day
and will help put the Dataflow measurements in a seasonal context.
On
yet another front, VIMS professor Jian Shen will feed data from the
Dataflow runs into his three-dimensional computer model of water flow
in Chesapeake Bay. The model holds promise for predicting bloom
dynamics, potentially giving shellfish growers and other concerned
parties advance warning of any impacts.
The
Dataflow cruises in the York and James rivers were also accompanied
by over-flights from a NASA Langley airplane that was equipped with
electromagnetic sensors and cameras, and by the collection of data
from NASA satellites. Researchers are now "ground-truthing"
the aerial and satellite imagery by comparing it with direct
measurements of algae and water quality from samples collected at the
same time and in the imaged locations.
Reece
sees great promise in collaborating with scientists at NASA and NOAA
to advance model development and the use of remote sensing for
predicting algal bloom patterns in Chesapeake Bay.
Lab
work and bioassays
Once
water samples from a bloom are returned to VIMS, researchers in a
number of labs begin the laborious process of identifying the species
present and characterizing any toxins.
Members
of the Reece lab--Bill Jones, Gail Scott, and Alanna MacIntyre--use
both microscopic analyses and DNA tests to identify potentially
harmful algal species. Development of these molecular DNA assays is a
primary focus of Reece's research at VIMS. The lab group plans to
extract and analyze DNA from about 300 of the 500 water samples
collected so far this summer.
VIMS
professor Juliette Smith--working with adjunct professor Tom
Harris--has focused her efforts on characterizing the complex array
of toxins that algae can generate. "A single cell can produce
multiple toxins," says Smith. "In addition, the same toxin
can be produced by multiple species. For instance, saxitoxins, which
cause paralytic shellfish poisoning, can be produced by both
dinoflagellates and cyanobacteria."
Smith
and other researchers at VIMS are also testing to what degree
bloom-derived toxins might be moving up the food web to impact marine
life and potentially human health. Graduate student Sarah Pease is
using funds from Virginia Sea Grant to monitor the health of caged
oysters in waters near the Goodwin Islands, and is also working with
Smith to conduct toxin analyses on oyster tissues.
Pease
and Patrice Mason--members of Vogelbein's lab--are conducting
toxicity "bioassays" with algae from both laboratory
cultures and field samples. These tests involve bathing small numbers
of oysters and finfish--both larvae and adults--in waters with
increasing concentrations of algal cells and, more recently, isolated
and purified toxins. They are a standard method for gauging the
effects of HABs on living organisms. This year's bioassays are still
in progress.
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