A strange green organism has spread around the globe, clogging up the world's rivers
Presented by Larry O'Hanlon
Has Didymo always been in the rivers of British Columbia?
It
began with a few small strange patches of slime, clinging to the rocks
of the Heber River in Canada. Within a year, the patches had become
thick, blooming
mats. Within a few years the mats had grown into a giant green snot.
And within a few decades this snot had spread around the world, clogging
up rivers as far away as South America, Europe and Australasia.
This snot, which is still flourishing today, is caused by a microscopic alga, a diatom that goes by its scientific name
Didymosphenia geminata. It has become so notorious it has its own
moniker, Didymo. People have been blamed for the sudden, global
explosion of this tiny organism, unwittingly carrying the algae from
river to river on fishing gear, boats and kayaks. The
huge snots it forms have wreaked havoc in waterways, forcing
governments and environmental organisations to initiate huge and costly
clean-up operations.
But
underlying the snots’ strange appearance is an even stranger story.
About Didymo itself, about what it is, and how it behaves.
Scientists are now discovering that the sudden appearance of Didymo may not have been so sudden after all.
River users are told to help stop Didymo.
Its
blooms aren’t really blooms – instead they are more of an
elixir-induced metamorphosis. And Didymo seems to ignore the usual rules
followed by invasive
species. It even appears likely that this little diatom may not even be
a significant problem itself; instead the green snot it forms may be a
symptom of greater changes underway in freshwater systems around the
world.
Malignant morphs
The
diatom was first spotted in 1988, a few patches of alga within Heber
River, in Vancouver Island, British Columbia. By 1989, several
kilometres of river
were covered in thick mats of the stuff, a surprise since the rare alga
was not thought to grow this way. Today, Didymo coats the rocks of
streams and rivers around the globe, from Quebec in Canada, Colorado and
South Dakota in the US, Poland and Norway in
Europe, even reaching Iceland, Chile and New Zealand.
Normally
diatoms or other algae bloom when water is rich in nutrients, feeding
an explosive increase in reproduction. This has a massive detrimental
impact
on freshwater systems. After diatoms increase in huge numbers, they
also die in huge numbers, creating a surge in decay that depletes oxygen
in the water. That suffocates freshwater animals such as insects,
crustaceans and fish. Algal blooms essentially create
an aquatic apocalypse.
But
intriguingly, none of this applies to Didymo. When it creates huge
snots, it’s not actually reproducing, scientists have discovered.
Instead, it’s morphing,
from something benign to something malignant. Each single-celled
organism exudes long stringy stalks of mucous that entangle, creating
the mats and snots that coat rocks.
The alga clogging New Zealand waterways.
“We
usually think of massive cell division in a bloom,” says ecologist
Cathy Kilroy, of New Zealand's National Institute of Water and
Atmospheric Research
Ltd, in Christchurch. “That's not the case here.”
The
water conditions which cause this transformation are also unexpected.
“Most algal blooms are attributed to too much nutrients,” explains
diatom researcher
Sarah Spaulding, of the US Geological Survey in Colorado. “This is the
first time it's attributed to too little nutrient.”
Didymo,
it turns out, only turns malignant when waters are very low in
phosphorus, a nutrient often associated with pollution by detergents and
fertilisers.
It’s this paucity of phosphorous that causes the stringy stalks to
grow, not the alga trying to reproduce, says Kilroy, whose experiments
helped establish the connection.
Related
to this discovery is an extreme irony. Governments and organisations
around the world have, for a very long time, tried to stop algal blooms
from
strangling rivers by reducing phosphorous pollution, believing the
algal feed off this nutrient boost. But in doing so, they might have
encouraged the green snot that is Didymo.
“It goes against everything we’ve been thinking for 50 years,” says Spaulding.
Ever-present?
Didymo
is also pulling a second surprise on scientists. For decades, it was
thought that people spread the diatom around the world, the alga
hitching a ride
on the tackle, nets and wading boots of fishermen, and boats and
boating equipment. To counter the threat, river users have been
encouraged to clean their gear between visits.
But
Didymo may not have been spread across the globe after all. It may have
been there all along, believe Brad Taylor of Dartmouth College in
Hanover, New
Hampshire, US and Max Bothwell of Environment Canada's Pacific
Biological Station in Nanaimo, BC.
Warning signs in New Zealand
The
two diatom researchers have just published a study in the journal
BioScience. It reveals fossil and historical evidence that Didymo has
long existed
on every continent except Africa, Antarctica and Australia. Fossilised
forms of Didymo, for example, can be found in at least 11 countries in
Europe, across North America and Asia, and in South America.
“The idea that
D. geminata is a recently introduced species or a native species
expanding its range has been accepted and promoted,” say the scientists
in their study. But that idea is wrong, they argue. And it explains why
legislation banning certain types of wading
gear, thought to help spread algae, has had no impact on the spread of
Didymo’s green snot into new rivers. Because Didymo was already there.
There
is one place that Didymo may have invaded; New Zealand. A decade ago,
small patches of snot started appearing within rivers on South Island.
The snots
were suspiciously just downstream of places popular with fishermen and
kayakers. It has since spread all over the island, green snots
blanketing some river beds.
“The
issue is whether Didymo was here in New Zealand before 2004,” says
Kilroy. “Actually, we don't know. Was it here, undetected, or
introduced?” She suspects
the latter, having not yet found any historical evidence of its
presence in the country. The rise of Didymo in New Zealand also
coincided with an increase in tourism, and its appearance elsewhere.
“All of a sudden it went from being extremely rare to being
extremely common,” said Kilroy. The South Island's clean,
low-phosphorus streams and rivers were perfect, virgin territory for
Didymo to grow its stalks, and bloom into snots. “It's a no brainer.”
Since
2004, New Zealanders have waged a war on the little diatom. “People are
quite concerned about it here,” says Kilroy. Many believe that
government action
has successfully prevented the green snot reaching the North Island.
Taylor
and Bothwell, however, suspect the story is simpler. The volcanic soils
of North Island are naturally rich in phosphorous, which leaches into
its
rivers. They think Didymo has reached North Island, but it can’t
survive in its phosphorous-rich rivers.
One
way to answer the question of whether Didymo invaded New Zealand, or
has long resided there, is to take samples from below the country’s
lakes, searching
for fossilised remains of the alga. But the technique is costly.
Catastrophic or not?
However,
to fishermen and boaters wrestling with Didymo’s green snots, its
origins are academic. They want to know what it's doing to the
waterways, whether
it's hurting fish or invertebrates such as the insects on which fish
depend.
Even
here though, the diatom continues to surprise. Research has shown that
the alga boosts numbers of small insects, such as midges and gnats,
while reducing
numbers of larger insects, such as mayflies, stoneflies and
caddisflies. “That seems to be a universal change in these streams,”
says fisheries biologist Daniel James of the US Fish and Wildlife
Service in the Black Hills of South Dakota, where Didymo appeared
in 2002.
New Zealand’s South Island harbours the alga.
James’s
research has focused on the diets of freshwater fish, and whether they
have less to eat due to the presence of green snots. But the reduction
in
larger insects hasn’t so far caused a problem, as the fish are just
eating more of the smaller insects.
While
the fish of South Dakota seem unaffected by Didymo, which covers around
a third of the riverbeds studied by James, he cautions that may not be
so in
other places, such as in New Zealand. There the snots can blanket the
whole river.
However,
on the whole, Didymo doesn’t yet seem to have caused the ecological
catastrophe that so many feared. “At first there was a huge concern
about how
Didymo was going to affect fish,” says James. “But it's more of an
annoyance.”
It
can cause some problems for irrigation systems, says Kilroy. But its
biggest impact seems to be aesthetic. “The main effect of Didymo is how
it changed
the appearance of rivers and streams,” she says. “It's not toxic. It
really doesn't do anything really awful.”
The real invaders
So
what then, is the real meaning of the Didymo phenomenon worldwide? The
true significance of the green snot taking over the world’s rivers may
not be the
snot itself, but what it tells us about our own, human impact on
freshwater ecosystems.
Bothwell,
Taylor and Kilroy have collaborated on new research recently published
in the journal Diatom Research. They propose a few mechanisms by which
humans
may have altered the world’s rivers, creating the opportunity for
Didymo.
Didymo covers rocks in British Columbia
First,
the burning of fossil fuels such as oil and coal has increased the
amount of nitrogen compounds on the atmosphere. That nitrogen causes
soil organisms
to better use phosphorous in the soil, meaning less phosphorous runs
into rivers and streams. That creates the more phosphorus-free water
beloved by Didymo.
A
second mechanism, which has the same effect as the first, is the
increasing addition of nitrogen-rich fertilisers to soils by agriculture
and forest managers.
A
third involves climate change, and the way it changes the timing of
growing seasons and melting of snow. This might somehow also reduce the
amount of phosphorous
entering freshwater ecosystems, the researchers say, again creating the
environment in which Didymo green snots can flourish.
It
could be that different mechanisms are the cause of Didymo blooms in
different places around the world, or that they are working in synergy.
But
whichever turn out to be at work, the research seems to suggest that we
have met the invaders, and they are not green snot-causing Didymo
diatoms. They
are us.
No comments:
Post a Comment