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1.
A toxic Pseudo-nitzschia spp. bloom in the Todos Santos Bay area (31.8°N), Mexico, is described. This is the southernmost report of the presence of domoic acid (DA) in the California Current System and it is also the first report of the distribution of toxic Pseudo-nitzschia species and DA on the Baja California west coast. The maximum cell abundance of Pseudo-nitzschia was 3.02 × 105 cells L?1 and the maximum concentration of DA in particulate matter (pDA) was 0.86 μg L?1. P. australis constituted the major proportion of cells identified as Pseudo-nitzschia. The environmental conditions associated with wind-driven upwelling were the cause for the accumulation of toxic cells. Maximum pDA and cell concentration were detected around 14 °C. The ratio of the concentration of macronutrients seemed to be the important factor for the accumulation of P. australis. The highest cell abundance was detected in areas with a high Si(OH)4 to N ratio in the entire water column. Therefore, the relative increase of silicate concentration related to upwelling conditions was the probable cause for the accumulation of P. australis. Maximum photosystem II (PSII) quantum efficiency of charge separation (Fv/Fm) was negatively correlated to the pDA to fucoxanthin ratio. This ratio was used in this work as an index of cellular DA content. Therefore, the photosynthetic competence of the cells might be an important factor that affected their DA cellular content.  相似文献   

2.
The Santa Barbara Channel, CA is a highly productive region where wind-driven upwelling and mesoscale eddies are important processes driving phytoplankton blooms. In recent years, the spring bloom has been dominated by the neurotoxin-producing diatom, Pseudo-nitzschia spp. In this paper, we relate a 1.5-year time series of Pseudo-nitzschia spp. abundance and domoic acid concentration to physical, chemical, and biological data to better understand the mechanisms controlling local Pseudo-nitzschia spp. bloom dynamics. The data were used to define the ranges of environmental conditions associated with Pseudo-nitzschia spp. bloom development in the Santa Barbara Channel. The time series captured three large toxic events (max. particulate domoic acid concentration, pDA ~6000 ng L?1; max. cellular domoic acid concentrations, cDA ~88 pg cell?1) in the springs of 2005–2006 and summer 2005 corresponding to bloom-level Pseudo-nitzschia spp. abundance (>5.0 × 104 cells L?1). In general, large increases in Pseudo-nitzschia spp. abundance were accompanied by increases in cDA levels, and cDA peaks preceded pDA peaks by at least one month in both the springs of 2005 and 2006. Statistical models incorporating satellite ocean color (MODIS-Aqua and SeaWiFS) and sea surface temperature (AVHRR) data were created to determine the probability that a remotely sensed phytoplankton bloom contains a significant population of toxic Pseudo-nitzschia spp. Models correctly estimate 98% of toxic bloom situations, with a 7–29% rate of false positive identification. Conditions most associated with high cDA levels are low sea surface temperature, high salinity, increased absorption by cDOM (412 nm), increased reflectance at 510/555 nm, and decreased particulate absorption at 510 nm. Future efforts to merge satellite and regionally downscaled forecasting products with these habitat models will help assess bloom forecasting capabilities in the central CA region and any potential connections to large-scale climate modes.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of marine snow (MS) by the toxic diatom Pseudo-nitschia australis was simulated using a roller table experiment. Concentrations of particulate and dissolved domoic acid (pDA and dDA) differed significantly among exponential phase and MS formation under simulated near surface conditions (16 °C/12:12-dark:light cycle) and also differed compared to subsequent particle decomposition at 4 °C in the dark, mimicking conditions in deeper waters. Particulate DA was first detected at the onset of exponential growth, reached maximum levels associated with MS aggregates (1.21 ± 0.24 ng mL−1) and declined at an average loss rate of ∼1.2% pDA day−1 during particle decomposition. Dissolved DA concentrations increased throughout the experiment and reached a maximum of ∼20 ng mL−1 at final sampling on day 88. The succession by P. australis from active growth to aggregation resulted in increasing MS toxicity and based on DA loading of particles and known in situ sinking speeds, a significant amount of toxin could have easily reached the deeper ocean or seafloor. MS formation was further associated with significant dDA accumulation at a ratio of pDA: dDA: cumulative dDA of approximately 1:10:100. Overall, this study confirms that MS functions as a major vector for toxin flux to depth, that Pseudo-nitzschia-derived aggregates should be considered ‘toxic snow’ for MS-associated organisms, and that effects of MS toxicity on interactions with aggregate-associated microbes and zooplankton consumers warrant further consideration.  相似文献   

4.
A toxic bloom of Pseudo-nitzschia spp. was observed in the Alabama coastal waters of the northern Gulf of Mexico (NGOM) in June 2009 that resulted in the accumulation of domoic acid (DA) in fish. The bloom initiated following a large storm event that likely caused increased groundwater discharge 16–20 days prior to peak densities. Eleven sites, located in littoral shoreline waters and inshore embayments spanning the entire Alabama NGOM coastline, were sampled during peak densities to assess Pseudo-nitzschia species composition and toxicity, and associated water-quality parameters. Small fish (0.27–11.9 g body weight) were collected at six of these sites for analysis of DA content. High Pseudo-nitzschia spp. densities (8.27 × 104–5.05 × 106 cell l−1) were detected at eight sites located in the littoral shoreline and particulate DA was detected at six of these littoral sites (48.0–540 pg ml−1). The bloom consisted primarily (>90%) of Pseudo-nitzschia subfraudulenta, a species previously characterized as forming only a minor component of Pseudo-nitzschia assemblages and not known to produce DA. Pseudo-nitzschia spp. were at low densities or not detected at the inshore sites and DA was detected at these sites. Pseudo-nitzschia spp. density varied along an estuarine gradient, with greater densities occurring in the most saline, clear, and nutrient-poor waters. Cell density was strongly and negatively correlated with silicate (Si) concentrations and the ratios of silicate to dissolved inorganic nitrogen and phosphate (Si:DIN and Si:PO4). Cell toxin quota was negatively correlated with phosphate, and strongly and positively correlated with the ratio of total nitrogen to total phosphorus (TN:TP). These relationships are consistent with previous observations that indicate Pseudo-nitzschia spp. density and toxicity are likely to be greater in high salinity, high irradiance, and nutrient-poor waters. DA was detected in 128 of 131 (98%) of the fish collected, which included seven primary and secondary consumer species. This is the first demonstration of trophic transfer of DA in this region of the NGOM, indicating that toxic blooms of Pseudo-nitzschia spp. in Alabama coastal waters have the potential to transfer DA to recreationally and commercially important fish species.  相似文献   

5.
The population dynamics of different Pseudo-nitzschia species, along with particulate domoic acid (pDA) concentrations, were studied from May 2012 to December 2013 in the Bay of Seine (English Channel, Normandy). While Pseudo-nitzschia spp. blooms occurred during the two years of study, Pseudo-nitzschia species diversity and particulate domoic acid concentrations varied greatly. In 2012, three different species were identified during the spring bloom (P. australis, P. pungens and P. fraudulenta) with high pDA concentrations (∼1400 ng l−1) resulting in shellfish harvesting closures. In contrast, the 2013 spring was characterised by a P. delicatissima bloom without any toxic event. Above all, the results show that high pDA concentrations coincided with the presence of P. australis and with potential silicate limitation (Si:N < 1), while nitrate concentrations were still replete. The contrasting environmental conditions between 2012 and 2013 highlight different environmental controls that might favour the development of either P. delicatissima or P. australis. This study points to the key role of Pseudo-nitzschia diversity and cellular toxicity in the control of particulate domoic acid variations and highlights the fact that diversity and toxicity are influenced by nutrients, especially nutrient ratios.  相似文献   

6.
The diatom genus Pseudo-nitzschia (Peragallo) associated with the production of domoic acid (DA), the toxin reposnsible for amnesic shellfish poisoning, is abundant in Scottish waters. A two year study examined the relationship between Pseudo-nitzschia cells in the water column and DA concentration in blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) at two sites, and king scallops (Pecten maximus) at one site. The rate of DA uptake and depuration differed greatly between the two species with M. edulis whole tissue accumulating and depurating 7 μg g−1 (now expressed as mg kg−1) per week. In contrast, it took 12 weeks for DA to depurate from P. maximus gonad tissue from a concentration of 68 μg g−1 (now mg kg−1) to <20 μg g−1 (now mg kg‐1). The DA depuration rate from P. maximus whole tissue was <5% per week during both years of the study. Correlations between the Pseudo-nitzschia cell densities and toxin concentrations were weak to moderate for M. edulis and weak for P. maximus. Seasonal diversity on a species level was observed within the Pseudo-nitzschia genus at both sites with more DA toxicity associated with summer/autumn Pseudo-nitzschia blooms when P. australis was observed in phytoplankton samples. This study reveals the marked difference in DA uptake and depuration in two shellfish species of commercial importance in Scotland. The use of these shellfish species to act as a proxy for DA in the environment still requires investigation.  相似文献   

7.
《Harmful algae》2009,8(1):111-118
The nitrogen uptake capabilities of the toxigenic diatom Pseudo-nitzschia australis (Frenguelli), freshly isolated from Monterey Bay California, were examined in unialgal laboratory cultures at saturating photosynthetic photon flux densities (100 μmol photons m−2 s−1) and 15 °C. The kinetics of nitrogen (nitrate, ammonium, urea and glutamine) uptake as a function of substrate concentration were estimated from short (20.5 min) incubations using the 15N-tracer technique. Based on the estimated maximum specific uptake rates and measures of N affinity (the initial slope of the uptake versus nutrient concentration curve), nitrate is the preferred nitrogen substrate, followed by glutamine and ammonium, which are equivalent. Rates of urea uptake by P. australis did not saturate at concentrations as high as 36 μg-at N L−1, and urea uptake as a function of concentration could not be described by Michaelis–Menten kinetics over the concentration gradient tested. Although there is a clear preference for nitrate at equivalent concentrations (compared to ammonium, urea, and glutamine), these laboratory results demonstrate the capability of this pennate diatom to utilize both inorganic and organic forms of nitrogen, supporting field observations that P. australis blooms during both upwelling and non-upwelling conditions off the west coast of North America. Substantial differences in the nitrogenous nutrition of P. australis can be expected in these environments, and anthropogenic inputs of N substrates such as ammonium and urea can support its growth, and may contribute significantly to both harmful diatom blooms and the maintenance of seed populations at non-bloom abundances, particularly during periods of reduced or absent upwelling.  相似文献   

8.
Over 1200 samples were collected from Louisiana estuarine and coastal shelf waters between 1989 and 2002, and analyzed to examine the population dynamics of Pseudo-nitzschia and to assess the potential threat posed by domoic acid (DA), a potent neurotoxin produced by some members within this toxigenic diatom genus. Results demonstrated that three species in this region (Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries, P. pseudodelicatissima complex, P. delicatissima) produce DA, and that particulate toxin levels were highest (up to 3.05 μg L−1) during the spring bloom, while cellular concentrations were highest in the winter/early spring when P. multiseries was most abundant (up to 30 pg cell−1). These particulate toxin levels are comparable to those seen in other regions (e.g., United States west coast) where DA poisoning events have occurred in the past. Pseudo-nitzschia were most abundant under dissolved inorganic nitrogen-replete conditions coupled with lower silicate and/or phosphate concentrations, and in the early spring months when temperatures were cooler. Pseudo-nitzschia were occasionally well-represented in the phytoplankton assemblage (≥106 cells L−1 in 14% of samples, over 50% of total phytoplankton in 5% of samples), indicating that planktivores (e.g., Gulf menhaden, Brevoortia patronus) may have little choice but to consume Pseudo-nitzschia cells, thereby providing potential vectors for DA transfer to higher trophic levels. By comparison, eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) present in estuarine waters may be more exposed to this toxin when Pseudo-nitzschia cells are part of a mixed assemblage, reducing selective grazing by these bivalves. C. virginica may thus represent the most effective vector for DA exposure in humans.  相似文献   

9.
While cyst germination may be an important factor for the initiation of harmful/toxic blooms, assessments of the fluctuation in phytoplankton cyst germination, from bottom sediments to water columns, are rare in situ due to lack of technology that can detect germinated cells in natural bottom sediments. This study introduces a simple mesocosm method, modeled after previous in situ methods, to measure the germination of plankton resting stage cells. Using this method, seasonal changes in germination fluxes of toxic dinoflagellates resting cysts, specifically Alexandrium fundyense (A. tamarense species complex Group I) and A. pacificum (A. tamarense species complex Group IV), were investigated at a fixed station in Kesennuma Bay, northeast Japan, from April 2014 to April 2015. This investigation was conducted in addition to the typical samplings of seawater and bottom sediments to detect the dinoflagellates vegetative cells and resting cysts. Bloom occurrences of A. fundyense were observed June 2014 and February 2015 with maximum cell densities reaching 3.6 × 106 cells m−2 and 1.4 × 107 cells m−2, respectively. The maximum germination fluxes of A. fundyense cysts occurred in April 2014 and December 2014 and were 9.3 × 103 cells m−2 day−1 and 1.4 × 104 cells m−2 day−1, respectively. For A. pacificum, the highest cell density was 7.3 × 107 cells m−2 during the month of August, and the maximum germination fluxes occurred in July and August, reaching 5.8 × 102 cells m−2 day−1. Thus, this study revealed the seasonal dynamics of A. fundyense and A. pacificum cyst germination and their bloom occurrences in the water column. Blooms occurred one to two months after peak germination, which strongly suggests that both the formation of the initial population by cyst germination and its continuous growth in the water column most likely contributed to toxic bloom occurrences of A. fundyense and A. pacificum in the bay.  相似文献   

10.
A new toxin-producing marine diatom, Nitzschia bizertensis sp. nov., isolated from the Bizerte Lagoon (Tunisia, Southwest Mediterranean Sea) is, based on studies on eight different strains, characterized morphologically by light microscopy, transmission and scanning electron microscopy, and phylogenetically using the nuclear rDNA regions: SSU, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 and D1–D3 of the LSU. The species belongs to the sections Lanceolatae or Lineares as defined by Cleve and Grunow (1880). These sections are characterized by species having linear-lanceolate valves with an eccentric raphe where the fibulae does not extend into the valve, and are otherwise famous for the lack of characters useful for delineation of species. Nitzschia bizertensis differs from most other species in these sections by having a high density of interstriae. The morphological and phylogenetic studies and comparisons with previously described Nitzschia species showed Nitzschia bizertensis sp. nov. to be a new species. Batch culture experiments were conducted for estimations of maximum growth rate and production of domoic acid (DA). Maximum cellular DA content of the examined strains ranged from 2 × 10−4 to 3.6 × 10−2 pg cells−1. The total DA concentration (pg mL−1) was high already in exponential growth phase maybe due to reinoculation of “old” stationary phase cells, and increased into stationary growth phase where it reached a stationary level varying among the strains from ca. 4500 to 9500 pg mL−1. Nitzschia bizertensis represents a new domoic acid-producing diatom and is the second toxin producing Nitzschia species. The resolution of Nitzschia bizertensis and Nitzschia navis-varingica in different parts of the LSU phylogenetic tree, and the recovery of the Pseudo-nitzschia species phylogenetically distant from those two species suggests that the ability to produce DA either evolved multiple times independently or was lost multiple times.  相似文献   

11.
Global warming was believed to accelerate the expansion of cyanobacterial blooms. However, the impact of changes due to the allelopathic effects of cyanobacterial blooms with or without algal toxin production on the ecophysiology of its coexisting phytoplankton species arising from global warming were unknown until recently. In this study, the allelopathic effects of toxic and non-toxic Microcystis aeruginosa strains on the growth of green alga Chlorella vulgaris and photosynthesis of the co-cultivations of C. vulgaris and toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-905 or non-toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-469 were investigated at different temperatures. The growth of C. vulgaris, co-cultured with the toxic or non-toxic M. aeruginosa strains, was promoted at 20 °C but inhibited at temperatures ≥25 °C. The inhibitory effects of the toxic and non-toxic M. aeruginosa strains on of the co-cultivations (C. vulgaris and non-toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-469 or toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-905) also linearly increased with elevated temperatures. Furthermore, toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-905 induced more inhibition toward growth of C. vulgaris or Pmax and Rd of the mixtures than non-toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-469. C. vulgaris dominated over non-toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-469 but toxic M. aeruginosa FACHB-905 overcame C. vulgaris when they were co-cultured in mesocosms in water temperatures from 20 to 25 °C. The results indicate that allelopathic effects of M. aeruginosa strains on C. vulgaris are both temperature- and species-dependent: it was stimulative for C. vulgaris at low temperatures such as 20 °C, but inhibitory at high temperatures (≥25 °C); the toxic strain was determined to be more harmful to C. vulgaris than the non-toxic one. This suggests that global warming may aggravate the ecological risk of cyanobacteria blooms, especially those with toxic species as the main contributors.  相似文献   

12.
Toxic Alexandrium minutum blooms recur annually in Cork Harbor, Ireland where they initiate in an inlet known as the North Channel. The dynamics of these blooms have been studied since 2003, and a high degree of inter-annual variability in the cell densities has been observed. Two intense blooms, with maximum cell densities >500,000 cells L−1, were observed in the summers of 2004 and 2011. Annual cyst surveys during winter found that cyst densities decreased after the 2004 bloom, and by 2010 an average of ca. 40 cysts g dry wt sediment−1 was recorded. The intensity of blooms was found to be independent of the cyst density measured the previous winter. The cyst input to the sediment during both intense and low density blooms was measured directly through the deployment of sediment traps in the North Channel. The data allowed an estimate of the proportion of the A. minutum vegetative cells that underwent successful encystment, which averaged at 2.5% across a range of cell densities spanning three orders of magnitude. Maturation times of fresh cysts were determined at 5, 10 and 15 °C. The maturation time at 15 °C was found to be approximately 5 months, a value which increased by two months for a 5° decrease in temperature. A cyst dynamics model was constructed based on the field data to simulate the temporal variation of A. minutum cysts in the oxic layer of sediment. It revealed that a degree of resuspension is required to prevent cyst stocks from becoming exhausted in the thin oxic layer at the surface of the sediment. The model also demonstrated that the cysts supplied by periodic intense blooms, which occur with a frequency of every 7–8 years, are not in themselves enough to allow the population to persist over long time scales (decades). The cyst input from interim blooms of lower density is however enough to ensure the annual inoculation of the water column with A. minutum cells.  相似文献   

13.
Occurrence of toxic cyanobacterial blooms has become a worldwide problem, increasing the risk of human poisoning due to consumption of seafood contaminated with cyanotoxins. Though no such cases of human intoxication due to toxic blooms have been reported so far from India, most of the studies related to blooms have been restricted to reporting of a bloom and/or antimicrobial activity of its extract. Detailed toxicity study of cyanobacterial blooms are lacking. A study on the toxicity of a dense bloom (14.56 × 106 trichomes L−1) of the marine diazotrophic cyanobacteria, Trichodesmium erythraeum, observed in the coastal waters of Phoenix Bay, Port Blair, Andamans was undertaken. The significance of this bloom is that it was a single species and had conspicuously inhibited the growth of other phytoplankton and complete exclusion of zooplankton from the bloom region, intimating the involvement of toxins in the bloom. The cyanobacterial extracts showed prominent antimicrobial activity against certain human pathogenic bacteria and fungi. Studies on the toxicity of the cyanobacterial extracts was carried out using brine shrimp bioassay, 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay and comet assay. The cyanobacterial extract exhibited toxic effect to Artemia salina causing mortality of up to 40% after 48 h at a concentration of 1 mg mL−1, while it induced cytotoxicity in cell lines (HepG2 and HaCat) and caused DNA damage in human lymphocytes in vitro.  相似文献   

14.
The gulfs that surround Península Valdés (PV), Golfo Nuevo and Golfo San José in Argentina, are important calving grounds for the southern right whale Eubalaena australis. However, high calf mortality events in recent years could be associated with phycotoxin exposure. The present study evaluated the transfer of domoic acid (DA) from Pseudo-nitzschia spp., potential producers of DA, to living and dead right whales via zooplanktonic vectors, while the whales are on their calving ground at PV. Phytoplankton and mesozooplankton (primary prey of the right whales at PV and potential grazers of Pseudo-nitzschia cells) were collected during the 2015 whale season and analyzed for species composition and abundance. DA was measured in plankton and fecal whale samples (collected during whale seasons 2013, 2014 and 2015) using liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). The genus Pseudo-nitzschia was present in both gulfs with abundances ranging from 4.4 × 102 and 4.56 × 105 cell l−1. Pseudo-nitzschia australis had the highest abundance with up to 4.56 × 105 cell l−1. DA in phytoplankton was generally low, with the exception of samples collected during a P. australis bloom. No clear correlation was found between DA in phytoplankton and mesozooplankton samples. The predominance of copepods in mesozooplankton samples indicates that they were the primary vector for the transfer of DA from Pseudo-nitzschia spp. to higher trophic levels. High levels of DA were detected in four whale fecal samples (ranging from 0.30 to 710 μg g−1 dry weight of fecal sample or from 0.05 and 113.6 μg g−1 wet weight assuming a mean water content of 84%). The maximum level of DA detected in fecal samples (710 μg DA g−1 dry weight of fecal sample) is the highest reported in southern right whales to date. The current findings demonstrate for the first time that southern right whales, E. australis, are exposed to DA via copepods as vectors during their calving season in the gulfs of PV.  相似文献   

15.
Most harmful algal blooms (HAB) originate away from the shore and, for them to endanger human health, they must be first transported to shore after which they must enter the surf zone where they can be feed upon by filter feeders. The last step in this sequence, entrance into the surf zone, depends on surf zone hydrodynamics. During two 30-day periods, we sampled Pseudo-nitzschia and particulate domoic acid (pDA) in and offshore of a more dissipative surf zone at Sand City, California (2010) and sampled Pseudo-nitzschia in and out of reflective surf zones at a beach and rocky shores at Carmel River State Beach, California (2011). At Sand City, we measured domoic acid in sand crabs, Emerita analoga. In the more dissipative surf zone, concentrations of Pseudo-nitzschia and pDA were an order of magnitude higher in samples from a rip current than in samples collected just seaward of the surf zone and were 1000 times more abundant than in samples from the shoals separating rip currents. Domoic acid was present in all the Emerita samples and varied directly with the concentration of pDA and Pseudo-nitzschia in the rip current. In the more reflective surf zones, Pseudo-nitzschia concentrations were 1–2 orders of magnitude lower than in samples from 125 and 20 m from shore. Surf zone hydrodynamics affects the ingress of Pseudo-nitzschia into surf zones and the exposure of intertidal organisms to HABs on the inner shelf.  相似文献   

16.
The toxic marine dinoflagellate, Karenia brevis (the species responsible for most of red tides or harmful algal blooms in the Gulf of Mexico), is known to be able to swim vertically to adapt to the light and nutrient environments, nearly all such observations have been made through controlled experiments using cultures. Here, using continuous 3-dimensional measurements by an ocean glider across a K. brevis bloom in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico between 1 and 8 August 2014, we show the vertical migration behavior of K. brevis. Within the bloom where K. brevis concentration is between 100,000 and 1,000,000 cells L−1, the stratified water shows a two-layer system with the depth of pycnocline ranging between 14–20 m and salinity and temperature in the surface layer being <34.8 and >28 °C, respectively. The bottom layer shows the salinity of >36 and temperature of <26 °C. The low salinity is apparently due to coastal runoff, as the top layer also shows high amount of colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM). Within the top layer, chlorophyll-a fluorescence shows clear diel changes in the vertical structure, an indication of K. brevis vertical migration at a mean speed of 0.5–1 m h−1. The upward migration appears to start at sunrise at a depth of 8–10 m, while the downward migration appears to start at sunset (or when surface light approaches 0) at a depth of ∼2 m. These vertical migrations are believed to be a result of the need of K. brevis cells for light and nutrients in a stable, stratified, and CDOM-rich environment.  相似文献   

17.
Domoic acid (DA) poisoning in the southern part of the California Current System has been associated typically with blooms of Pseudo-nitzschia australis. The environmental variables that promote growth and DA production in the Mexican part of this system have not been identified. The present study investigated the effect of temperature and two nutrient ratios on the growth characteristics and DA content of two (BTS-1, BTS-2) P. australis strains isolated from the Pacific coast of northern Baja California peninsula, México. Of the different temperatures assayed (10, 12, 14, 15, 18 and 20 °C), the maximum cell abundance was detected at 12 °C for BTS-2 and 14 °C for BTS-1. The highest maximum specific growth rate (1.69 day−1) was measured at 15 °C for BTS-2. With the exception of cells maintained at 15 °C, growth characteristics were similar in P. australis cultured in a high Si:NO3 (2.5) or low Si:NO3 (0.5) ratio at each temperature. Dissolved (dDA) and cellular (cDA) DA content measured at the stationary phase of growth was similar in cells cultivated at the different temperatures. No difference in cDA (between 0.11 and 1.87 pg DA cell−1) was observed in cells cultivated at the two nutrient ratios. To evaluate if P. australis accumulates DA (cDA + dDA) at different stages of the culture and not only during the stationary phase of growth, the BTS-1 strain was cultivated at 14 °C and the content of this toxin was measured during culture development. The cultures were maintained at high (HL; 200 μmol quanta m−2 s−1) and low light (LL; 30 μmol quanta m−2 s−1) and in the two nutrient ratios to evaluate the effect of these variables on DA content. The photosynthetic performance and pigment concentration were measured as indicators of the physiological condition of the cells. cDA was detected in all culture conditions and during the different stages of growth. The highest DA content was measured during the lag phase of growth and it was present mainly in the medium (dDA = 70.83 pg DA cell−1). Cells cultivated at HL produced more DA than LL cultured cells. P. australis cultured in HL presented lower photosynthetic rates than LL cells and had similar concentrations of photoprotective pigments and the highest maximum photosynthetic rates were detected during the lag phase of growth in all culture conditions. The results demonstrate that P. australis from northern Baja California peninsula presents a narrow temperature range for optimal growth under batch culture conditions. P. australis produce DA at different stages of growth, and DA content was related to the light intensity at which the cells were cultivated.  相似文献   

18.
The dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii is a well-known harmful algal species that can potentially cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP). Usually A. ostenfeldii occurs in low background concentrations only, but in August of 2012 an exceptionally dense bloom of more than 1 million cells L−1 occurred in the brackish Ouwerkerkse Kreek in The Netherlands. The A. ostenfeldii bloom produced both saxitoxins and spirolides, and is held responsible for the death of a dog with a high saxitoxin stomach content. The Ouwerkerkse Kreek routinely discharges its water into the adjacent Oosterschelde estuary, and an immediate reduction of the bloom was required to avoid contamination of extensive shellfish grounds. Previously, treatment of infected waters with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) successfully suppressed cyanobacterial blooms in lakes. Therefore, we adapted this treatment to eradicate the Alexandrium bloom using a three-step approach. First, we investigated the required H2O2 dosage in laboratory experiments with A. ostenfeldii. Second, we tested the method in a small, isolated canal adjacent to the Ouwerkerkse Kreek. Finally, we brought 50 mg L−1 of H2O2 into the entire creek system with a special device, called a water harrow, for optimal dispersal of the added H2O2. Concentrations of both vegetative cells and pellicle cysts declined by 99.8% within 48 h, and PSP toxin concentrations in the water were reduced below local regulatory levels of 15 μg L−1. Zooplankton were strongly affected by the H2O2 treatment, but impacts on macroinvertebrates and fish were minimal. A key advantage of this method is that the added H2O2 decays to water and oxygen within a few days, which enables rapid recovery of the system after the treatment. This is the first successful field application of H2O2 to suppress a marine harmful algal bloom, although Alexandrium spp. reoccurred at lower concentrations in the following year. The results show that H2O2 treatment provides an effective emergency management option to mitigate toxic Alexandrium blooms, especially when immediate action is required.  相似文献   

19.
《Harmful algae》2003,2(2):89-99
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) have posed a serious threat to the aquaculture and fisheries industries in recent years, especially in Asia. During 1998 there were several particularly serious blooms in the coastal waters of south China, which caused a serious damage to aquaculture. We report a massive dinoflagellate bloom near the mouth of Pearl River in November 1998 with analyses of data from both in situ sea water measurements and satellites. A multi-parameter environmental mapping system was used to obtain real-time measurements of water quality properties and wind data through the algal bloom area, which allow us to compare water measurements from inside and outside of the bloom areas. This bloom with high concentrations of algal cells was evident as a series of red colored parallel bands of surface water that were 100–300 m long and 10–30 m wide with a total area of about 20–30 km2 by visual. The algal density reached 3.8×107 cells l−1 and the surface chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentration was high. The algal species has been identified as Gymnodinium cf. catenatum Graham. The water column in the bloom area was stratified, where the surface temperature was 24–25 °C, the salinity was 18–20%, and the northern wind was about 3–4 m s−1 in the bloom area. The SeaWiFS image has shown high Chl-a area coinciding with the bloom area. The sea surface temperature (SST) image of the Pearl River estuary combined with the in situ measurements indicated that the bloom occurred along a mixing front between cooler lower salinity river water and warmer higher saline South China Sea (SCS) water.  相似文献   

20.
《Harmful algae》2009,8(1):103-110
Cultural eutrophication is frequently invoked as one factor in the global increase in harmful algal blooms, but is difficult to definitively prove due to the myriad of factors influencing coastal phytoplankton bloom development. To assess whether eutrophication could be a factor in the development of harmful algal blooms in California (USA), we review the ecophysiological potential for urea uptake by Pseudo-nitzschia australis (Bacillariophyceae), Heterosigma akashiwo (Raphidophyceae), and Lingulodinium polyedrum (Dinophyceae), all of which have been found at bloom concentrations and/or exhibited noxious effects in recent years in California coastal waters. We include new measurements from a large (Chlorophyll a > 500 mg m−3) red tide event dominated by Akashiwo sanguinea (Dinophyceae) in Monterey Bay, CA during September 2006. All of these phytoplankton are capable of using nitrate, ammonium, and urea, although their preference for these nitrogenous substrates varies. Using published data and recent coastal time series measurements conducted in Monterey Bay and San Francisco Bay, CA, we show that urea, presumably from coastal eutrophication, was present in California waters at measurable concentrations during past harmful algal bloom events. Based on these observations, we suggest that urea uptake could potentially sustain these harmful algae, and that urea, which is seldom measured as part of coastal monitoring programs, may be associated with these harmful algal events in California.  相似文献   

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