TY - JOUR T1 - Evidence for the Range Expansion of Ciguatera in French Polynesia: A Revisit of the 2009 Mass-Poisoning Outbreak in Rapa Island (Australes Archipelago) A1 - Chinain,Mireille A1 - Mahana Iti Gatti,Clémence A1 - Ung,André A1 - Cruchet,Philippe A1 - Revel,Taina A1 - Viallon,Jérôme A1 - Sibat,Manoella A1 - Varney,Patrick A1 - Laurent,Victoire A1 - Hess,Philipp A1 - Taiana Darius,Hélène AD - Institut Louis Malardé, Laboratory of Marine Biotoxins—UMR EIO (IFREMER-ILM-IRD-UPF), P.O. Box 30, 98713 Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia AD - Institut Français de Recherche Pour l’Exploitation de la Mer, Phycotoxins Laboratory, 44311 Nantes, France AD - Météo France, Direction Inter-Régionale en Polynésie Française, P.O. Box 6005, 98702 Faa’a, Tahiti, French Polynesia UR - https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00662/77362/ DO - 10.3390/toxins12120759 KW - ciguatera poisoning KW - French Polynesia KW - Gambierdiscus KW - ciguatoxins KW - epidemiology KW - toxicological analyses KW - risk management KW - climate change N2 - Ciguatera poisoning (CP) results from the consumption of seafood contaminated with ciguatoxins (CTXs). This disease is highly prevalent in French Polynesia with several well-identified hotspots. Rapa Island, the southernmost inhabited island in the country, was reportedly free of CP until 2007. This study describes the integrated approach used to investigate the etiology of a fatal mass-poisoning outbreak that occurred in Rapa in 2009. Symptoms reported in patients were evocative of ciguatera. Several Gambierdiscus field samples collected from benthic assemblages tested positive by the receptor binding assay (RBA). Additionally, the toxicity screening of ≈250 fish by RBA indicated ≈78% of fish could contain CTXs. The presence of CTXs in fish was confirmed by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The potential link between climate change and this range expansion of ciguatera to a subtropical locale of French Polynesia was also examined based on the analysis of temperature time-series data. Results are indicative of a global warming trend in Rapa area. A five-fold reduction in incidence rates was observed between 2009 and 2012, which was due in part to self-regulating behavior among individuals (avoidance of particular fish species and areas). Such observations underscore the prominent role played by community outreach in ciguatera risk management Y1 - 2020/12 PB - MDPI AG JF - Toxins SN - 2072-6651 VL - 12 IS - 12 ID - 77362 ER -