Silver: So our job here is to identify them, know what the toxin levels are and then we work with the state health department and we also measure these toxins as they enter shellfish. So we coordinate our findings with those of the public health department. And just about every part of the developed world has monitoring programs to detect this when it gets into shellfish.
Narrator: Silver stresses that in almost all cases, these phytoplankton are not harmful to swimmers or surfers.
Silver: At low levels, they're not a problem, so it's entirely a dose problem.
Narrator: For Science Today, I'm Larissa Branin.