A Deadly Scum

Killer blue-green algae blooms have returned to our rivers

(Aug. 13, 2009)  The first sign that something was wrong with Joey, the Johnston family’s beloved, hyperactive Blue Heeler cross, came as they were walking back up to their campsite from the edge of the Van Duzen River. He was moving slowly, which actually wasn’t all that strange considering the manic, splash-crazy swimming he’d been doing for the past two hours. But a few minutes later, when everyone had made their way back down to the water and Joey didn’t jump in but just sat there, listless — that was unusual. Joey flat-out loved the water, and at just 3 years old he usually had boundless energy. When Pete Johnston called out to his wife Jennifer to say the dog was now vomiting all over their friends’ river gear, they knew Joey was in trouble.

“By the time I got there he was almost comatose,” Jennifer Johnston told the Journal last week. “His tongue was hanging out in the sand. His eyes were rolled back.”

Humboldt County Environmental Health Division Water Program Coordinator Harriet Hill collects samples from the site of a recent dog death on the South Fork Eel River near Phillipsville. Phot submitted by Humboldt County Environmental Health Division.
GALLERY >

They carried Joey up into the shade and set him down. He wagged his tail weakly, and they thought maybe he’d be OK. But then he went completely limp. With no cell phone reception in the Pamplin Grove campground, they quickly shoved Joey into his portable kennel in the back of their car, and Jennifer started driving northwest along curvy Highway 36. Pete stayed behind with their son, 7, and daughter, 6. Near Hydesville, Jennifer was finally able to reach the Animal Emergency Center in Eureka, and as she struggled to talk and drive at the same time, she could hear Joey’s kennel rustling and shaking in the back of the car. He was having convulsive seizures.

“At Fernbridge I pulled over because I couldn’t hear anything,” Jennifer said. “He was already dead.”

Joey, she later learned, had likely died from swallowing cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae. The photosynthetic bacteria can form almost anywhere, though usually in harmless single cells. In summer months, however, it can multiply rapidly in warm, shallow water, forming blooms that can produce some of the most powerful natural poisons in the world — poisons with no known antidote. “It’s a ubiquitous, very common bacteria,” says Harriet Hill with Humboldt County Division of Environmental Health. “It’s always there. The question is, will it bloom and produce toxins?”

Since 2001, 11 dogs have died in Humboldt and Mendocino counties after coming into contact with water containing cyanobacteria. That includes Joey, plus another dog who died just last Sunday after swimming in the South Fork Eel River near Phillipsville. Tests are underway to confirm the cause of death. Hill suggests that anyone whose dog shows signs of illness after contact with algal blooms freeze some of the dog’s body fluids for analysis. (Gross but helpful, she said.)

The Johnstons had heard about blue-green algae and made a point of staying out of local rivers after Aug. 1. But they didn’t realize just how dangerous cyanobacteria can be, and on this particular late-July day the slimy stuff hardly looked like a potential killer.

“You could see a little in the bottom of the river but nothing that would make you think twice,” Jennifer Johnston said.

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ONE Comments

Comment / By Richard Engel / Aug. 17, 2009, 11:37 a.m.

This article touched only briefly on the causes of this growing problem. Failing septic systems and fertilizer runoff are noted as two of those causes, and they point to the fatal flaw in the pro-growth vision for unincorporated areas of Humboldt County espoused by Humboldt Coalition for Property Rights and others.

Our river ecosystems are in fact dying of a thousand cuts, most of them tied to our land use practices. Sedimentation from unpaved roads and slurping of ever-greater amounts of surface and ground water for homesteads don’t help the rivers either. Of course we can and must improve practices to gradually mitigate these impacts, but we’ve got an emergency on our hands here. Stronger measures are called for, and reining in rural sprawl should be at the top of our to-do list.

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