Predicting Cyanotoxin Risks under Current and Future Climate along the Freshwater-to-Marine Continuum

  • Schnetzer, Astrid A. (PI)

Project Details

Description

ABSTRACT – RESEARCH PROJECT 3
The production and transport of cyanotoxins along the freshwater-to-marine continuum raises critical public
health concerns, especially for coastal populations that are more likely to be exposed to contaminated water and
seafood. Moreover, while cyanobacteria and cyanotoxins have been relatively well studied in freshwater lakes,
little is known about their distribution and persistence in coastal systems. Thus, the overarching objective of
Project 3, as an integral component of the North Carolina Center for Coastal Algae, People, and
Environment (NC C-CAPE), is to develop a comprehensive modeling framework that elucidates key controls
on toxin accumulation and provides predictive capabilities to help stakeholders protect human health. Through
leveraging diverse data and information sources within a probabilistic framework (Bayesian Network modeling),
Aim 1 of this research provides the predictive basis for estimating cyanotoxin risks from key
environmental covariates, like temperature, salinity, nutrient concentrations, and solar radiation. The resulting
models will enable prediction of cyanotoxin congener concentrations in water and oyster tissue, including the
risk of exceeding health advisory thresholds, even when only a subset of relevant covariates is available. While
Aim 1 is based largely on water quality data from specific monitoring locations, protecting public health requires
a predictive understanding of how cyanotoxins vary across space and time. To this end, Aim 2 will leverage
coastal circulation modeling and remote sensing to assess how key drivers of cyanobacteria and
cyanotoxins vary across the coastal North Carolina study area. By combining this information with probabilistic
relationships for cyanotoxin concentration (for example, the Bayesian Network from Aim 1), it will be possible
to map toxin risks across space, and under different hydrological conditions. This effort will also allow us to
determine the extent to which toxic cyanobacteria blooms are constrained to regions of freshwater inflow and
transport (e.g., river outlets), versus forming in-place at various points along the freshwater-to-marine continuum.
Finally, coastal systems are vulnerable to multiple dimensions of climate change, including sea level rise,
increasing temperatures, and changes in freshwater inflow. These factors, along with potential changes in
nutrient loading due to watershed development, will be investigated in the future scenarios of Aim 3. Aim 3 will
update the modeling approach described in Aim 2 with future system forcings to assess future cyanotoxin
distributions, including the likely overlap with viable oyster habitat. For each of the three aims, we will engage
with stakeholders to develop relevant predictive tools and risk mapping products, with the aim of protecting public
health by identifying high-risk conditions, and informing future management decisions regarding the protection
of coastal water quality.
StatusActive
Effective start/end date1/12/2330/11/24

Funding

  • National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences: US$109,887.00

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Water Science and Technology

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