Seven Southeast Alaska Tribes Form Partnership to Monitor Harmful Algal Bloom Events
October 02, 2014
The Southeast Alaska Tribal Toxins (SEATT) partners include: Sitka Tribe of Alaska, Klawock Cooperative Association, Craig Tribal Association, Yakutat Tlingit Tribe, Petersburg Indian Association, Organized Village of Kasaan, and Central Council Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Marine Biotoxin Programs from Seattle, WA and Charleston, SC have committed to provide training through workshops to help develop the SEATT program. Sitka Tribe of Alaska is hosting a workshop in November for SEATT to provide training on sample collection techniques and data entry. NOAA staff will help facilitate the trainings using previously established protocols used by other HAB monitoring groups throughout nation. Each SEATT Tribe has received funding through the Environmental Protection Agency Indian General Assistance Program totaling $210,000 for fiscal year 2015, with plans to continue through 2017. Sitka Tribe of Alaska has also been awarded an additional $150,000 from Environmental Protection Agency Indian General Assistance Program to support SEATT with the bi-annual technical workshops and conduct cellular toxin analysis. Additionally, Sitka Tribe of Alaska received $527,000 for the development of a marine biotoxin lab in Sitka from the Administration for Native Americans’ Environmental Regulatory Enhancement program. The lab will provide the SEATT partners the ability to assess their communities' vulnerability for human health risks following with the same regulatory standards used by other state and federal agencies. The Sitka Tribe of Alaska lab will conduct toxin analysis on shellfish using the new Receptor Binding Assay (RBA) technique developed at the NOAA Charleston laboratory. The Receptor Binding Assay was just recently accepted as a regulatory method used to determine toxin levels in shellfish by the Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference (ISSC) and has been adopted into the National Shellfish Sanitation Program.
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