Chelsea Salter at graduationChelsea Salter studied the potential of bacteria to combat the toxic effects of algal blooms.

Sand-based microbes explored as filter of algal blooms

Chelsea Salter spent her master’s studies combing through Lake Erie sand investigating microbes because they were doing something unique. They were cleaning water tainted with an algal bloom toxin called cyanotoxin.

Salter (BSc 2020, MSc 2023) first heard of the phenomenon happening off the coast of Pelee Island when she was an undergraduate working in Chris Weisener’s lab. Dr. Weisener is a School of the Environment professor and researcher with the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research (GLIER).

“It is really unique, and we don’t know of other natural bacterial communities that are doing this,” says Salter.

“As climate change intensifies and water resource demands increase, proper management and protection of freshwater resources must be prioritized to ensure water security.”

Harmful algal blooms are collections of cyanobacteria which can produce toxic secondary metabolites, such as microcystin, and release them into freshwater bodies, creating potentially significant human health risks. The western basin of Lake Erie, bordered by Michigan, Ohio, and southwestern Ontario, is frequently contaminated by toxic algal blooms.

Yet monitoring programs of public well waters on Pelee Island, also situated in the western basin of Lake Erie, have shown an absence of contamination of microcystin in their drinking water supplies.

Pelee Island’s municipal water supply and residential drinking wells both gather their water directly from the lake, which has passed through sand-filled trenches along the shoreline of the island. Salter looked at how and why the resilient and adaptive bacterial community in that sand were degrading the toxin from several aspects: the metabolic breakdown, gene transcription and taxonomic response to the toxin.

“Because of where it is located and the repeated exposure, it adaptively acquired all the tools it needed to break down this toxin as if it was a food source,” she says.

“Bacteria are extremely resilient and will utilize any resource in their means to survive.”

To recreate this degradation in the lab, Salter performed a benchtop batch experiment to monitor the breakdown of microcystin and the associated microbial activity over 48 hours to gain insights into the mechanisms controlling toxin degradation.

Overall, the results revealed a complex metabolism and supported that the community established a novel breakdown pathway, says Salter.

She says this complex community is very effective at degrading microcystin which means there is great potential for a water treatment application to treat outbreaks as they happen elsewhere in Lake Erie.

“We need more research but using bacteria as a potential biological sand filter application when there is toxin in the water would offer a safe and effective means to eliminate microcystin toxins without the need for chemical treatments,” she says.

Salter recently published her findings in the journal, Water Research, in the article, “Elucidating Microbial Mechanisms of Microcystin-LR Degradation in Lake Erie Beach Sand through Metabolomics and Metatranscriptomics.” She was also featured in the fall 2023 Great Lakes HABs Collaborative Newsletter.

“I’m definitely interested in the water quality of Lake Erie because I’ve lived here my whole life — Lake Erie is my great lake,” she says.

“Hopefully my research bridges the gap to get us to a place where it is more viable to harness the power of bacteria to mitigate the risks posed by toxic algal blooms, which frankly are not going to go away anytime soon.”

During her master’s at the University of Windsor, Salter was awarded a graduate research fellowship with the Cooperative Institution for Great Lake Research (CIGLR) at the University of Michigan. She is currently working as a microbial ecology laboratory technician at the Agriculture and Agri-food Canada Harrow Research Station.

feet and hands of people in therapy group Among the services provided through the Student Counselling Centre, group therapy is an ongoing and readily available resource.

Therapy groups to promote student wellness

The Student Counselling Centre provides free and confidential support to students registered at the University of Windsor.

However, its staff has found that students are unaware of the available supports and when they do reach out, they are already in a state of crisis or overwhelmed.

“To best support students in a proactive way, we want to bring awareness that group therapy is a service provided to individuals that are experiencing distress related to anxiety, depression, loss, interpersonal challenges, academic struggles, motivation etc.,” says group therapy co-ordinator Brianna Valenzuela.

She lists several group options available this semester, including:

GROW/Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (six-week cohorts)

A group dedicated to working through the four pillars of DBT: Emotional regulation, mindfulness, distress tolerance, and interpersonal effectiveness.

GROW/Codependency and Adult Relationships (six-week cohorts)

Students will learn about their attachment styles, how it relates to people pleasing, the negative effects our behaviour can have on ourselves and our adult relationships, assertive communication, and boundary setting.

GROW/Cognitive Behavioural Therapy: The Struggle is Real (four-week cohorts)

Students will learn the thoughts/feelings/behaviour connection, unhelpful thinking styles, challenge automatic thoughts, and reframe new perspectives.

COPE/drop-in groups – Managing strong and difficult emotions (two-week cohorts)

Students will learn skills that help you understand the purpose of emotions, debunk myths about emotions, and discover a pathway to the wise mind.

COPE/drop-in groups – Managing conflict and getting needs met (two-week cohorts)

Students will learn the different goals associated with interpersonal effectiveness, barriers to interpersonal effectiveness, assertive communication, and boundary setting.

Therapeutic Skills Maintenance (rolling enrolment, offered every week throughout the semester)

Students who want to keep the therapeutic skills they have learned, practised, and maintained.

Workshop/Drop-in/Registration – Understanding Anxiety

Psychoeducational group for understanding the physiological symptoms of anxiety.

Workshop/Drop-in/Registration - Mindfulness/Meditation

Students will learn skills and techniques to keep them in the present moment.

To register and find out more details about dates and time, visit the Student Counselling Centre website, inquire via email scc@uwindsor.ca, or stop by the Student Counselling Centre main office in room 293, CAW Student Centre.

Dylan, Jasmine, and Nathan BullNathan Bull (right) and his family, including siblings Dylan and Jasmine, have been buoyed by community support in his fight against liposarcoma.

Community rallies behind alumnus battling rare form of cancer

Jasmine Bull describes the outpouring of community support her family received after being hit with life-changing news shortly before the holidays as a “big old hug.”

The University of Windsor engineering student said her brother, Nathan Bull, a 2019 BComm graduate himself, complained of pain a few months ago. When he went to get it looked at, Jasmine said doctors believed it was simply a flare-up of his Crohn’s Disease.

In November, Nathan received his biopsy results, finding out he had a rare form of cancer — Grade 3 dedifferentiated liposarcoma which came with a “grim” prognosis.

Jasmine said hearing the news was a “pure shock,” before the sadness set in. She said they have a tight-knit family, and she holds a close bond with her brother.

“Family is so important to me, and my brothers have been such a rock to guide me through school,” the youngest of four said.

She said a big part of her decision to attend the University of Windsor was knowing her brothers, Nathan and Dylan, would be there to lean on while away from their Tillsonburg home.

Given the rarity of Nathan’s cancer, and the size of his tumour, the family knew this would be a long road ahead, and they would likely need to seek treatment outside of the London area.

To help with medical expenses, a GoFundMe page was launched, which as of Friday afternoon has raised $60,297 of its $200,000 goal.

“We’ve gotten so much support from family, friends, community — people we never expected,” Jasmine said. 

“It’s truly made the difference and has given us the strength to make it through this.”

The family initially considered treatment in the United States due to long wait times in Ontario. However, after a consultation at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre in Toronto, Nathan was immediately accepted as a patient and started chemotherapy the next day.

According to the GoFundMe page, doctors cannot guarantee the treatment will be successful, but they have come up with an “aggressive” plan that includes chemotherapy and radiation to “hopefully shrink the tumor enough to be surgically removed.”

“We know Nathan still has a long road ahead, but we could not be happier,” the family posted in the “Save Nathan” Facebook group chronicling his treatment journey. “He is in good hands. We are so grateful for the outpouring of love and support we have received from everyone in our community.”

If doctors are unable to shrink Nathan’s tumour with this current course of treatment, different options would need to be explored, including a clinical trial or looking into options across the border — neither of which would be covered by insurance. 

Right now, the family is taking things “day by day, hour by hour” when it comes to Nathan’s treatment.

The community continues to stand by the Bull family by arranging care packages, cooking food, messages of support, and initiating various fundraising projects.

“We’re hoping for a miracle here,” Jasmine said.

You can follow Nathan’s cancer journey here.

students boarding city busTransit Windsor will conduct business as usual while continuing contract negotiations with bus drivers.

Strike deferred at transit service

The union representing Transit Windsor bus drivers has temporarily delayed strike action while continuing contract negotiations.

For the latest updates, follow local media outlets and Transit Windsor updates.

Local 616 of the Amalgamated Transit Union has withdrawn notice of possible job action originally slated to begin today.

In the event of a disruption in future, employees are encouraged to discuss with their immediate supervisors options to make alternate plans, including remote work if operationally viable.

Campus community members should be prepared to find alternative transportation to minimize the impact on travel to and from campus. If possible, explore ride sharing with colleagues or friends who drive.

University and CUPE 1393 sign collective agreement

Officials from the University of Windsor administration and Local 1393 of the Canadian Union of Public Employees met Friday to formally sign the collective agreement negotiated and ratified in 2022.

CUPE 1393 represents more than 300 UWindsor trades, technical, and professional staff members.

The full document, which will expire March 31, 2025, is available here.