Invasion of toxic marine cyanobacteria in to the tsunami affected coastal villages of southern India.

2010 
: This documentation explores the facts about the invasion of marine cyanobacteria in to the tsunami affected coastal villages of Nagapattinam district of Tamilnadu and Karaikkal district of Pondicherry Union Territory (UT) in southern India. Water samples were collected from eight tsunami-hit coastal villages in different open water sources. The collected samples were processed for detecting marine cyanobacterial growth. Totally 110 water samples were processed, three samples were positive for the toxic cyanobacteria, Lyngbya sp., and nine for nontoxic species such as Epithemia sp.,, Johannesbaptistia pellucida, Oscillatoria princeps, Phormidium fragile, Synechocystis sp. Besides posing a public health risk because of the toxic cyanobacteria, the bloom formation by the cyanobacterial species such as Anabaena, Microcystis, Lyngbya, Plectonema, Phormidium contaminated the water bodies and deteriorated the water quality in the tsunami affected villages. The study revealed that another kind of public health risk from the invasion of toxic cyanobacteria to the costal ecosystem during the tsunami. It is necessary, in this context, that the surveillance mechanism, which is geared up during or after natural disasters, should have a provision to monitor the transportation of toxic elements/organisms from marine system to coastal/inland ecosystems and to control such organisms.
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