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STATE
HEALTH DEPARTMENT LIFTS ANNUAL QUARANTINE
FOR
SPORT-HARVESTED MUSSELS
Quarantine Will Remain in Effect in San Luis Obispo County |
SACRAMENTO
(October 27, 2006) –
The
statewide annual quarantine on mussels taken by sport
harvesters from the ocean waters of California for human
consumption will end at midnight on Tuesday, Oct. 31, except
in San Luis Obispo County, State Public Health Officer Dr.
Mark Horton announced today. Extensive sampling of mussels
confirmed that shellfish-borne paralytic shellfish poisoning
(PSP) toxins are at safe or undetectable levels, except in
San Luis Obispo County.
The
quarantine is issued for the entire California coastline,
usually from May 1 through Oct. 31, to protect consumers of
sport-harvested shellfish from PSP and domoic acid
poisoning. The quarantine applies only to sport-harvested
mussels. Commercial shellfish harvesters in California must
be certified by the California Department of Health Services
(CDHS) and are subjected to stringent sample testing for
toxins. Commercial harvesting is stopped immediately if a
potentially dangerous level of toxin is found.
PSP is a
form of nervous system poisoning. Concentrated levels of
the PSP toxins can develop in California mussels and other
bivalve shellfish when they feed on certain naturally
occurring marine plankton. Shellfish become toxic only when
populations of the responsible organism, a dinoflagellate
known as Alexandrium catenella, become abundant in ocean
waters -- a phenomenon known as a "bloom." Bivalve
shellfish feed by filtering the microscopic organisms from
the water and concentrate the toxin in their bodies.
Domoic
acid was first recognized as a cause of poisoning in Canada
in 1987 when 107 people became ill and three died after
eating toxic mussels harvested on the Atlantic coast. This
toxin was observed for the first time on the Pacific Coast
in September 1991 when it was found to be the cause of death
of hundreds of pelicans and cormorants in the vicinity of
Santa Cruz.
It has
subsequently been linked to several episodes of severe
poisoning of marine mammals along the coast. Several mild
cases of human poisoning from domoic acid may have occurred
in the state of Washington in 1991 in consumers of toxic
razor clams from beaches north of the Columbia River.
The source
of domoic acid in seafood is several species of marine
diatoms in the genus Pseudo-nitzschia. Besides bivalve
shellfish, the viscera of anchovies, sardines, spiny
lobsters and several species of crabs has been found at
times to contain unsafe amounts of domoic acid. Toxic
anchovies were the source of domoic acid in the Santa Cruz
incident.
Consumers
can receive updated information about PSP and domoic acid by
calling CDHS' "Shellfish Information Line" at
1-800-553-4133.
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