Put down that drawn butter.
A spike in toxins on the California coast has prompted officials to delay the start of crab season.
Normally, recreational fishers would start harvesting Dungeness crabs on Saturday, and commercial fishers a week later. But the season was thrown into chaos after authorities found a massive bloom of coastal algae that produces a neurotoxin called domoic acid.
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The toxin accumulates in shellfish, and can sicken or kill people who eat it.
This week, officials found high levels of domoic acid in samples of Dungeness crab and rock crab, leading them to recommend that fisheries be closed.
On Thursday, the California Fish and Game Commission voted to delay the start of the fishing season.
An outright cancellation may follow, depending on whether the toxin levels decline to safe levels.









