Wednesday 31 October, 2012
Getting on top of toxin production
University of Waikato ecologist Professor David Hamilton has been awarded a $920,000 Marsden Grant to study toxin
production found in blue-green algae in lakes.
His research project is titled “Toxic in crowds: the triggers of toxin production in planktonic cyanobacteria”.
Cyanobacteria are commonly called blue-green algae. Some species can produce potent toxins which affect humans through
drinking water or contact recreation, as well as other organisms that live in the water. Blue-green algae are stimulated
to grow and form blooms by increasing levels of nutrients.
Recent records of increases in nutrient loads to lakes are therefore of particular concern, both from an environmental
point of view and for human health considerations. Professor Hamilton and his colleagues, including Dr Susie Wood from
Cawthron in Nelson, have found that when blue-green algae congregate into dense blooms they can rapidly ramp up the rate
of toxin production. “This project will try to understand why blue-green algae produce toxins and what specific triggers
make the blue-green algae increase toxin production when they form blooms.”
Professor Hamilton is one of six Waikato academics who received Marsden Grants totalling $3.6 million in the latest
round of funding, which is administered by the Royal Society of New Zealand on behalf of the Marsden Fund Council, and
funded by the New Zealand Government.
He has been researching aspects of water quality for more than 20 years and is currently part of a team that is
trialling an aeration device on Lake Rotoehu, pumping oxygen into the water to counteract the harm done by nutrients and
sediment that have leached or run off into the lake.
“Blooms of blue-green algae are increasing across the globe and scientists are trying to understand why. One culprit may
be intensification of agricultural land leading to more nutrients to fuel blooms of blue-green algae. Another may be
climate change since many lakes across the globe have warmed by 1-2 degrees Celsius over the past two decades; even more
rapidly than increases in air temperature.”
Blue-green algae are favoured by higher temperatures because they originate from bacteria which grow more rapidly than
other algae at elevated temperatures. The Marsden funding will help to identify both the causes of blue-green algal
blooms and the relationship of blooms to toxin production. “Ultimately it is hoped that the outcomes of the project will
improve knowledge of how to manage the occurrence of blue-green algal blooms and avoid the possibility of toxin
production by them.”
Professor Hamilton, the Bay of Plenty Regional Council Chair in Lake Restoration, also works internationally sharing
information with researchers from other countries as they seek long-term solutions that can be applied to any freshwater
lake system.
He is chief scientist for Lake Ecosystem Restoration New Zealand (LERNZ) - a ten-year $10 million initiative to identify
and remediate threats to lake ecosystems. Through LERNZ computer models are being developed that can be used for
prediction and management, and the model outputs are being adopted by regional councils and policy makers to assist in
future planning of lake restoration.
“Our LERNZ group also has buoys in nine lakes in New Zealand, China and Singapore that send out readings every fifteen
minutes, so we’re getting immediate and accurate information and can respond quickly if we see dramatic changes in water
quality. The benefit to working internationally is that you can collate data, share information, knowledge, software and
hardware amongst like-minded scientists across the globe.” Related to this, Professor Hamilton was one of the founding
members of GLEON, the Global Lakes Ecological Observatory Network, which now has more than 350 members worldwide who are
making high-frequency measurements in lakes.
This year, Professor Hamilton won the environmental scientist category at the Waikato Kudos Awards held to acknowledge
scientific achievement.
ENDS