{"meta":{"status":200,"messages":[],"pagination":{"max":1,"offset":0,"count":1,"total":1,"pageNum":1,"totalPages":1,"sort":null,"currentUrl":"https://api.digitalmedia.hhs.gov/api/v2/resources/media.json?offset=0&max=1&ignoreHiddenMedia=1&format=json&id=15753&newUrlBase=http://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/agents/algal-blooms","nextUrl":null,"previousUrl":null}},"results":[{"content":"<body>\n <div class=\"syndicate\"> \n  <div> \n   <img src=\"http://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/assets/images/harmful_algal_blooms.jpg\" alt=\"algal bloom\" height=\"217\" width=\"320\"> \n  </div> \n  <h4 autofocus=\"true\">What is a harmful algal bloom?</h4> \n  <p>A harmful algal bloom (HAB) occurs when toxin-producing algae grow excessively in a body of water. Algae are microscopic organisms that live in aquatic environments and use photosynthesis to produce energy from sunlight, just like plants. The excessive algal growth, or algal bloom, becomes visible to the naked eye and can be green, blue-green, red, or brown, depending on the type of algae.</p> \n  <p>Algae are always present in natural bodies of water like oceans, lakes, and rivers, but only a few types can produce toxins. In these algae, toxin production can be stimulated by environmental factors such as light, temperature, and nutrient levels. Algal toxins are released into the surrounding water or air can seriously harm people, animals, fish, and other parts of the ecosystem.</p> \n  <h4>Why do HABs occur?</h4> \n  <p>Scientists know that environmental conditions trigger HABs, such as warmer water temperatures in the summer and excessive nutrients from fertilizers or sewage waste brought by runoff, but are still learning more about why HABs occur. As climate change gradually warms the earth\u2019s climate, scientists expect HABs to become more frequent, wide-ranging, and severe.</p> \n  <h4>How are people exposed?</h4> \n  <p>During a HAB, people can get exposed to toxins from fish they catch and eat, from swimming in or drinking the water, and from the air they breathe. In recent years, there have been numerous instances of HABs in lakes that provide drinking water, like Lake Erie. Importantly, cooking contaminated seafood or boiling contaminated water does not destroy the toxins.</p> \n  <p>People rarely get sick from HAB-related toxins in commercial seafood, however, because state regulators closely monitored fisheries for HABs and close them during blooms.</p> \n  <p>People can prevent exposure to HABs by following local health advisories regarding the safety of recreationally caught seafood and drinking water sources.</p> \n  <h4>What are the health effects of harmful algal blooms?</h4> \n  <p>Depending on the type of algae, <span><a href=\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19025673\" target=\"_blank\">HABs can cause serious health effects and even death</a></span>. For example, eating seafood contaminated by toxins from algae called <em>Alexandrium</em> can lead to paralytic shellfish poisoning, which can cause paralysis and even death. The algae <em>Pseudo-nitzschia</em> produces a toxin called domoic acid that can cause vomiting, diarrhea, confusion, seizures, permanent short term memory loss, or death, when consumed at high levels.</p> \n  <p>HABs that occur in freshwater, like the Great Lakes and other drinking water sources, are dominated by the cyanobacteria <em>Microcystis</em>. This organism produces a liver toxin that can cause gastrointestinal illness as well as liver damage.</p> \n  <p>As with many environmental exposures, children and the elderly may be especially sensitive to HAB toxins. Populations that rely heavily on seafood are also at risk of long term health effects from potentially frequent, low level exposures to HAB toxins.</p> \n  <p>The table below summarizes common HABs and their health effects.</p> \n  <table border=\"1\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" summary=\"common HABs and their health effects\" data-module=\"tables-enhanced\"> \n   <thead> \n    <tr> \n     <th scope=\"col\" data-sortable=\"false\">Organism</th> \n     <th scope=\"col\" data-sortable=\"false\">Water Type</th> \n     <th scope=\"col\" data-sortable=\"false\">Color</th> \n     <th scope=\"col\" data-sortable=\"false\" data-breakpoints=\"xs\">Toxin</th> \n     <th scope=\"col\" data-sortable=\"false\" data-breakpoints=\"xs sm\">Target tissue</th> \n     <th scope=\"col\" data-sortable=\"false\" data-breakpoints=\"xs sm\">Health effects</th> \n    </tr> \n   </thead> \n   <tbody> \n    <tr> \n     <td><em>Alexandrium sp.</em></td> \n     <td>Salt</td> \n     <td>Red or brown</td> \n     <td>Saxitoxins</td> \n     <td>Nerves and muscles</td> \n     <td>Paralytic shellfish poisoning, paralysis, death</td> \n    </tr> \n    <tr> \n     <td><em>Karenia brevis</em></td> \n     <td>Salt</td> \n     <td>Red</td> \n     <td>Brevetoxins</td> \n     <td> \n      <ol> \n       <li>Nervous system</li> \n       <li>Respiratory system</li> \n      </ol> </td> \n     <td> \n      <ol> \n       <li>Gastrointestinal illness, muscle cramps, seizures, paralysis</li> \n       <li>Respiratory problems, especially for asthmatics</li> \n      </ol> </td> \n    </tr> \n    <tr> \n     <td><em>Pseudo-nitzschia</em></td> \n     <td>Salt</td> \n     <td>Red or brown</td> \n     <td>Domoic acid</td> \n     <td>Nervous system</td> \n     <td>Amnesiac shellfish poisoning, vomiting, diarrhea, confusion, seizures, permanent short term memory loss, or death</td> \n    </tr> \n    <tr> \n     <td><em>Microcystis</em></td> \n     <td>Fresh</td> \n     <td>Blue-green</td> \n     <td>Microcystin</td> \n     <td>Liver</td> \n     <td>Gastrointestinal illness, liver damage</td> \n    </tr> \n   </tbody> \n  </table> \n  <h4>Other impacts from HABs</h4> \n  <p>In addition to health concerns, HABs can damage the environment by depleting oxygen in the water, which can cause fish kills, or simply by blocking sunlight from reaching organisms deeper in the water. The economic impacts of HABs to fisheries and recreational areas can also be extensive. Closed fisheries can lose millions of dollars in revenue each week.</p> \n </div>\n <script type=\"application/ld+json\">{\"@context\":\"http://schema.org\",\"@type\":\"Article\",\"headline\":\"Harmful Algal Blooms\",\"datePublished\":\"2016-22-29T17:22:00Z\",\"description\":\"A harmful algal bloom (HAB) occurs when toxin-producing algae grow excessively in a body of water. Algae are microscopic organisms that live in aquatic environments and use photosynthesis to produce energy from sunlight, just like plants. 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Algae are microscopic organisms that live in aquatic environments and use photosynthesis to produce energy from sunlight, just like plants. The excessive algal growth, or algal bloom, becomes visible to the naked eye and can be green, blue-green, red, or brown, depending on the type of algae.","id":15753,"mediaType":"Html","name":"Harmful Algal Blooms","sourceUrl":"http://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/agents/algal-blooms/index.cfm"}]}