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Puffer Mortality Data
In 2010, a mass mortality of pufferfish in Hawaii was dominated by Arothron hispidus showing aberrant neurological behaviors. Using pathology, toxinology, and field surveys, we implicated a series of novel, polar, marine toxins as a likely cause of this mass mortality. Our findings are striking in that 1) a marine toxin was associated with a kill of a fish species that is, itself, toxic; 2) we provide a plausible mechanism to explain clinical signs of affected fish, and 3) this epizootic likely depleted puffer populations. Whilst our data are compelling, we did not synthesize the toxin de-novo, we were unable to categorically prove that the polar toxins caused mortality or that they were metabolites of an undefined parent compound. However, our approach does provides a template for marine fish kill investigations associated with marine toxins and inherent limitations of existing methods. Our study also highlights the need for more rapid and cost-effective tools to identify new marine toxins, particularly small, highly polar molecules.
Complete Metadata
| @id | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/7e55e61bcff4053e2a06dd6ddf817d8e |
|---|---|
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
| identifier | USGS:58b44cdbe4b01ccd54fca839 |
| spatial | -176.57226562163,17.098374046212,-150.20507812268,28.805790119802 |
| theme |
[ "geospatial" ] |