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Cattle mortality attributed to the toxic cyanobacteriumCylindrospermopsis raciborskii in an outback region of North Queensland
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Citations
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References
1999
Year
EcotoxicityHarmful MicroalgaeNorth QueenslandLivestock HealthCyanobacteriaComparative ToxicologyCattle MortalityToxicologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyToxicological AspectFarm DamAnimal ManagementOutback RegionEcotoxicologyPharmacologyAlgal BloomAnimal ScienceMicrobiologyEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicineTen Calves
Three cows and ten calves were found dead near a farm dam on a cattle property at McKinlay in northwest Queensland, Australia. At that time, the dam contained an algal bloom which was identified as a monoculture of the cyanobacterium C. raciborskii. Histological examination of the liver of a calf carcass showed signs consistent with poisoning caused by hepatotoxin. The hepatotoxic alkaloid cylindrospermopsin was detected in material harvested from the dam (4.1×10−15 g cell−1) and in a pure culture of an isolate from the bloom (4.4×10−15 g cell−1). An extract of this material was lethal to mice after 24 h at an intraperitoneal concentration of 153 mg kg−1. This appears to be the first report of animal poisonings attributed to the cyanobacterium C. raciborskii. ©1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Environ Toxicol 14: 179–182, 1999
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