Abstract

Benthic algae fuel summer food webs in many sunlit rivers, and are hotspots for primary and secondary production and biogeochemical cycling. Concerningly, riverine benthic algal assemblages can become dominated by toxic cyanobacteria, threatening water quality and public health. In the Eel River in Northern California, over a dozen dog deaths have been attributed to cyanotoxin poisonings since 2000. During the summers of 2013–2015, we documented spatial and temporal patterns of cyanotoxin concentrations in the watershed, showing widespread distribution of anatoxin-a in benthic cyanobacterial mats. Solid phase adsorption toxin tracking (SPATT) samplers were deployed weekly to record dissolved microcystin and anatoxin-a levels at 10 sites throughout the watershed, and 187 Anabaena-dominated or Phormidium-dominated cyanobacterial mat samples were collected from 27 locations to measure intracellular anatoxin-a (ATX) and microcystins (MCY). Anatoxin-a levels were higher than microcystin for both SPATT (mean MCY = 0.8 and ATX = 4.8 ng g resin-1 day-1) and cyanobacterial mat samples (mean MCY = 0.074 and ATX = 1.89 μg g-1 DW). Of the benthic mats sampled, 58.9% had detectable anatoxin-a (max = 70.93 μg g-1 DW), while 37.6% had detectable microcystins (max = 2.29 μg g-1 DW). SPATT cyanotoxin levels peaked in mid-summer in warm mainstem reaches of the watershed. This is one of the first documentations of widespread anatoxin-a occurrence in benthic cyanobacterial mats in a North American watershed.

Highlights

  • Cyanobacteria are a diverse phylum of photosynthetic bacteria that are globally distributed across aquatic environments [1,2]

  • Water quality can be degraded by cyanobacterial blooms [3], especially when they produce cyanotoxins, secondary metabolites that are harmful to humans and other organisms [4,5]

  • Anatoxin-a concentrations remained relatively stable over 48 hours in Milli-Q water, but decreased in filtered Eel River water (S2A Fig)

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Summary

Introduction

Cyanobacteria are a diverse phylum of photosynthetic bacteria that are globally distributed across aquatic environments [1,2]. Their accrual rates increase, resulting in cyanobacterial blooms. Water quality can be degraded by cyanobacterial blooms [3], especially when they produce cyanotoxins, secondary metabolites that are harmful to humans and other organisms [4,5]. Though most research has focused on planktonic blooms in lakes or estuaries, benthic cyanobacterial mats in rivers can impair water quality in fluvial systems [6]. Cyanotoxins produced within mats threaten public health for those.

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