Litcius/Paper detail

Hunting the eagle killer: A cyanobacterial neurotoxin causes vacuolar myelinopathy

Steffen Breinlinger, Tabitha J. Phillips, Brigette N. Haram, Jan Mareš, José A. Martínez Yerena, Pavel Hrouzek, Roman Sobotka, W. Matthew Henderson, Peter Schmieder, Susan M. Williams, James D. Lauderdale, H. Dayton Wilde, Wesley Gerrin, Andreja Kust, John W. Washington, Christoph Wagner, Benedikt Geier, Manuel Liebeke, Heike Enke, Timo H. J. Niedermeyer, Susan B. Wilde

2021Science178 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A lethal combination Although many human activities have clear negative effects on the natural world, there are also unforeseen consequences. Bald eagle mass death events in the southeastern United States may be one such downstream effect of human activity. After considerable effort, Breinlinger et al. identified the cause of these events as an insidious combination of factors. Colonization of waterways by an invasive, introduced plant provided a substrate for the growth of a previously unidentified cyanobacterium. Exposure of this cyanobacterium to bromide, typically anthropogenic in origin, resulted in the production of a neurotoxin that both causes neuropathy in animals that prey on the plants and also bioaccumulates to kill predators such as bald eagles. Science , this issue p. eaax9050

Topics & Concepts

HydrillaBiologyWildlifeEcologyAquatic plantMacrophyteAlkaloids: synthesis and pharmacologyAquatic Ecosystems and Phytoplankton DynamicsAlgal biology and biofuel production
Hunting the eagle killer: A cyanobacterial neurotoxin causes vacuolar myelinopathy | Litcius