In 2009, unprecedented mammal mortality in the southern part of the
Kruger National Park led to an investigation which implicated
M. aeruginosa. The dead animals included grazers and browsers, which preferred drinking from the leeward side of two dams, a natural point of accumulation for drifting
Microcystis blooms. Mammals such as elephants and buffalo that usually wade into water before drinking, were unaffected, as were the resident crocodiles. The source of nutrients that supported the
Microcystis growth was narrowed down to the dung and urine voided in the water by a large resident hippo population, unaffected by the bloom. The immediate problem was solved by breaching of the dam walls and draining of the water.
M. aeruginosa is the most abundant cyanobacterial genus in South Africa, with both toxic and harmless strains. Some South African water bodies are now highly contaminated, mostly from return flows out of dysfunctional wastewater treatment works that discharge over of untreated, or at best partially treated sewage into receiving rivers every day, with Hartebeestpoort Dam being among the worst. Microcystin has been linked to the death of sea otters in 2010, a threatened species in the US. The poisoning probably resulted from eating contaminated bivalves often consumed by sea otters and humans. Such bivalves in the area exhibited significant biomagnification (to 107 times ambient water levels) of microcystin.
Glyphosate metabolism Algal blooms of cyanobacteria thrive in the large phosphorus content of agricultural runoff. Besides consuming phosphorus,
M. aeruginosa thrives on
glyphosate, although high concentrations may inhibit it.
M. aeruginosa has shown glyphosate resistance as result of preselective mutations, and glyphosate presence serves as an advantage to this and other microbes that are able to tolerate its effects, while killing those less tolerant. In contrast research in Lake Erie has suggested that glyphosate may lead to blooms of another cyanobacterium -
Planktothrix - in place of
Microcystis. ==References==