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1.
Autonomous underwater gliders with customized sensors were deployed in October 2011 on the central West Florida Shelf to measure a Karenia brevis bloom, which was captured in satellite imagery since late September 2011. Combined with in situ taxonomy data, satellite measurements, and numerical circulation models, the glider measurements provided information on the three-dimensional structure of the bloom. Temperature, salinity, fluorescence of colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM) and chlorophyll-a, particulate backscattering coefficient, and K. brevis-specific chlorophyll-a concentrations were measured by the gliders over >250 km from the surface to about 30-m water depth on the shallow shelf. At the time of sampling the bloom was characterized by uniform vertical structures, with relatively high chlorophyll-a and CDOM fluorescence, low temperature, and high salinity. Satellite data extracted along the glider tracks demonstrated coherent spatial variations as observed by the gliders. Further, the synoptic satellite observations revealed the bloom evolution during the 7 months between late September 2011 and mid April 2012, and showed the maximum bloom size of ∼3000 km2 around 23 November. The combined satellite and in situ data also confirmed that the ratio of satellite-derived fluorescence line height (FLH) to particulate backscattering coefficient at 547 nm (bbp(547)) could be used as a better index than FLH alone to detect K. brevis blooms. Numerical circulation models further suggested that the bloom could have been initiated offshore and advected onshore via the bottom Ekman layer. The case study here demonstrates the unique value of an integrated coastal ocean observing system in studying harmful algal blooms (HABs).  相似文献   

2.
In summer 2014, a toxic Karenia brevis bloom (red tide) occurred in the NE Gulf of Mexico, during which vertical migration of K. brevis has been observed from glider measurements. The current study shows that satellite observations from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) can capture changes in surface reflectance and chlorophyll concentration occurring within 2 h, which may be attributed this K. brevis vertical migration. The argument is supported by earlier glider measurements in the same bloom, by the dramatic changes in the VIIRS-derived surface chlorophyll, and by the consistency between the short-term reflectance changes and those reported earlier from field-measured K. brevis vertical migration. Estimates using the quasi-analytical algorithm also indicate significant increases in both total absorption coefficient and backscattering coefficient in two hours. The two observations in a day from a single polar-orbiting satellite sensor are thus shown to be able to infer phytoplankton vertical movement within a short timeframe, a phenomenon difficult to capture with other sensors as each sensor can provide at most one observation per day, and cross-sensor inconsistency may make interpretation of merged-sensor data difficult. These findings strongly support geostationary satellite missions to study short-term bloom dynamics.  相似文献   

3.
Annual blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate Karenia brevis in the eastern Gulf of Mexico represent one of the most predictable global harmful algal bloom (HAB) events, yet remain amongst the most difficult HABs to effectively monitor for human and environmental health. Monitoring of Karenia blooms is necessary for a variety of precautionary, management and predictive purposes. These include the protection of public health from exposure to aerosolized brevetoxins and the consumption of toxic shellfish, the protection and management of environmental resources, the prevention of bloom associated economic losses, and the evaluation of long term ecosystem trends and for potential future bloom forecasting and prediction purposes. The multipurpose nature of Karenia monitoring, the large areas over which blooms occur, the large range of Karenia cell concentrations (from 5 × 103 cells L?1 to >1 × 106 cells L?1) over which multiple bloom impacts are possible, and limitations in resources and knowledge of bloom ecology have complicated K. brevis monitoring, mitigation and management strategies. Historically, K. brevis blooms were informally and intermittently monitored on an event response basis in Florida, usually in the later bloom stages after impacts (e.g. fish kills, marine mammal mortalities, respiratory irritation) were noted and when resources were available. Monitoring of different K. brevis bloom stages remains the most practical method for predicting human health impacts and is currently accomplished by the state of Florida via direct microscopic counts of water samples from a state coordinated volunteer HAB monitoring program. K. brevis cell concentrations are mapped weekly and disseminated to stakeholders via e-mail, web and toll-free phone numbers and provided to Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) for management of both recreational and commercial shellfish beds in Florida and to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for validation of the NOAA Gulf of Mexico HAB bulletin for provision to environmental managers. Many challenges remain for effective monitoring and management of Karenia blooms, however, including incorporating impact specific monitoring for the diverse array of potential human and environmental impacts associated with blooms, timely detection of offshore bloom initiation, sampling of the large geographic extent of blooms which often covers multiple state boundaries, and the involvement of multiple Karenia species other than K. brevis (several of which have yet to be isolated and described) with unknown toxin profiles. The implementation and integration of a diverse array of optical, molecular and hybrid Karenia detection technologies currently under development into appropriate regulatory and non-regulatory monitoring formats represents a further unique challenge.  相似文献   

4.
The toxic HAB dinoflagellate Karenia brevis (Davis) G. Hansen & Ø. Moestrup (formerly Gymnodinium breve) exhibits a migratory pattern atypical of dinoflagellates: cells concentrate in a narrow (∼0–5 cm) band at the water surface during daylight hours due to phototactic and negative geotactic responses, then disperse downward at night via non-tactic, random swimming. The hypothesis that this daylight surface aggregation behavior significantly influences bacterial and algal productivity and nutrient cycling within blooms was tested during a large, high biomass (chlorophyll a >19 μg L−1) K. brevis bloom in October of 2001 by examining the effects of this surface layer aggregation on inorganic and organic nutrient concentrations, cellular nitrogen uptake, primary and bacterial productivity and the stable isotopic signature (δ15N, δ13C) of particulate material. During daylight hours, concentrations of K. brevis and chlorophyll a in the 0–5 cm surface layer were enhanced by 131% (±241%) and 32.1% (±86.1%) respectively compared with an integrated water sample collection over a 0–1 m depth. Inorganic (NH4, NO3+2, PO4, SiO4) and organic (DOP, DON) nutrient concentrations were also elevated within the surface layer as was both bacterial and primary productivity. Uptake of nitrogen (NH4+, NO3, urea, dissolved primary amines, glutamine and alanine) compounds by K. brevis was greatest in the surface layer for all compounds tested, with the greatest enhancement evident in urea uptake rates, from 0.08 × 10−5 ng N K. brevis cell−1 h−1 to 3.1 × 10−5 ng N K. brevis cell−1 h−1. These data suggests that this surface aggregation layer is not only an area of concentrated cells within K. brevis blooms, but also an area of increased biological activity and nutrient cycling, especially of nitrogen. Additionally, the classic dinoflagellate migration paradigm of a downward migration for access to elevated NO3 concentrations during the dark period may not apply to certain dinoflagellates such as K. brevis in oligotrophic nearshore areas with no significant nitricline. For these dinoflagellates, concentration within a narrow surface layer in blooms during daylight hours may enhance nutrient supply through biological cycling and photochemical nutrient regeneration.  相似文献   

5.
《Harmful algae》2010,9(6):898-909
Using shipboard data collected from the central west Florida shelf (WFS) between 2000 and 2001, an optical classification algorithm was developed to differentiate toxic Karenia brevis blooms (>104 cells l−1) from other waters (including non-blooms and blooms of other phytoplankton species). The identification of K. brevis blooms is based on two criteria: (1) chlorophyll a concentration ≥1.5 mg m−3 and (2) chlorophyll-specific particulate backscattering at 550 nm  0.0045 m2 mg−1. The classification criteria yielded an overall accuracy of 99% in identifying both K. brevis blooms and other waters from 194 cruise stations. The algorithm was validated using an independent dataset collected from both the central and south WFS between 2005 and 2006. After excluding data from estuarine and post-hurricane turbid waters, an overall accuracy of 94% was achieved with 86% of all K. brevis bloom data points identified successfully. Satisfactory algorithm performance (88% overall accuracy) was also achieved when using underway chlorophyll fluorescence and backscattering data collected during a repeated alongshore transect between Tampa Bay and Florida Bay in 2005 and 2006. These results suggest that it may be possible to use presently available, commercial optical backscattering instrumentation on autonomous platforms (e.g. moorings, gliders, and AUVs) for rapid and timely detection and monitoring of K. brevis blooms on the WFS.  相似文献   

6.
Blooms of the toxin producing dinoflagellate Karenia brevis occur routinely on the West Florida Shelf of the Gulf of Mexico. Nutrient supplies are thought to play a large role in the formation and maintenance of these blooms. The role of top-down control has been less well studied, but grazing, or the lack thereof, on these toxic species may also enhance the formation of large biomass blooms in this region. Zooplankton community structure and copepod species composition were analyzed from samples collected on the West Florida Shelf (WFS) during a NOAA funded ECOHAB regional Karenia Nutrient Dynamics project during October 2007–2010. In 2008 there was no statistical difference in the abundance of zooplankton at bloom and non-bloom stations, however in 2009 there was a statistically significant difference (p < 0.05) between the abundance of zooplankton at stations with Karenia present. To investigate copepod ingestion rates in relation to K. brevis, shipboard and laboratory experiments of the single label method of 14C labeled phytoplankton culture, and time course ingestion experiments with isolated copepods were performed. Calculated ingestion rates suggest that the copepod species Centropages velificatus, and Acartia tonsa ingested K. brevis, however rates were variable among collection sites and K. brevis strains. Parvocalanus crassirostris did not ingest K. brevis in any of the experiments.  相似文献   

7.
This study represents the most comprehensive assessment of kinetic parameters for Karenia brevis to date as it encompasses natural populations sampled during three different bloom years in addition to cultured strains under controlled conditions. Nitrogen (N) uptake kinetics for ammonium (NH4+), nitrate (NO3), urea, an amino acid mixture, individual amino acids (glutamate and alanine), and humic substrates were examined for the toxic red tide dinoflagellate, K. brevis, during short term incubations (0.5–1 h) using 15N tracer techniques. Experiments were conducted using natural populations collected during extensive blooms along the West Florida Shelf in October 2001, 2002, and 2007, and in cultured strains (CCFWC 251 and CCFWC 267) obtained from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Institute culture collection. Kinetic parameters for the maximum uptake velocity (Vmax), half-saturation concentration (Ks), and the affinity constant (α) were determined. The affinity constant is considered a more accurate indicator of substrate affinity at low concentrations. K. brevis took up all organic substrates tested, including N derived from humic substances. Uptake rates of the amino acid mixture and some NO3 incubations did not saturate even at the highest substrate additions (50–200 μmol N L−1). Based upon the calculated α values, the greatest substrate preference was for NH4+ followed by NO3  urea, humic compounds and amino acids. The ability of K. brevis to utilize a variety of inorganic and organic substrates likely helps it flourish under a wide range of nutrient conditions from bloom initiation in oligotrophic waters offshore to bloom maintenance near shore where ambient nutrient concentrations may be orders of magnitude greater.  相似文献   

8.
Blooms of Karenia brevis plague the West Florida Shelf (WFS) region in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) where they exert harmful effects on aquatic biota and humans. Because productivity on the WFS is N limited, new N inputs into the region are thought to trigger blooms of K. brevis. Here we examine the potential for new N inputs via N2 fixation by Trichodesmium and other diazotrophic plankton to contribute to the N demand of K. brevis. Because of possible methodological biases, we also compared N2 fixation rates by cultured Trichodesmium using the 15N2 bubble addition method and the 15N2 saturated seawater. Both methods yielded identical results in 12 and 24 h incubations; however, there was more variability in rate estimates made using the bubble addition method. Pelagic N2 fixation rates by other planktonic diazotrophs ranged from 0 to 13.6 nmol N L−1 d−1, comparable to or higher than rates observed in oligotrophic gyres. These rates should be considered conservative estimates because they were made using the bubble addition method. Integrating over our study area, we estimate that new inputs of N to the WFS via N2 fixation are on the order of 0.011 Tmol N annually. Further, we measured directly the trophic transfer of recently fixed N2 to co-occurring plankton that included K. brevis and found that up to 47% of N2 fixed was transferred to non-diazotrophic plankton even in short (<6 h) incubations where N2 fixation was likely underestimated.  相似文献   

9.
《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   

10.
Using ten years (2003–2012) of satellite Chlorophyll-a data, we report that annual phytoplankton bloom climax in the Northwest Pacific marginal seas (17°–58°N) delays northward at a rate of 22.98 ± 2.86 km day−1. The spring bloom is a dominant feature of the phytoplankton seasonal cycle in this region, except for the northern South China Sea, which features a winter bloom. The sea surface hourly Photosynthetically Available Radiation (PAR) intensity averaged over the bloom peak duration is nearly uniform (1.04 ± 0.10 W m−2 h−1) among the four sub-regions (i.e. the northern South China Sea, the Kuroshio waters, the Sea of Japan and the Sea of Okhotsk), although different algal species in these four distinct ecological provinces could adapt to a much larger change in other environmental parameters (including total daily PAR, day length, sea surface temperature, net surface heat flux, mixed layer depth, wind speed and euphotic depth). The differences of the hourly PAR intensity between the four provinces during their bloom periods are smaller than those during non-bloom seasons. In contrast, an increasing total daily PAR (W m−2 day−1), due to the longer day length at higher latitudes, may balance decreasing sea surface temperature and induce algal flowering. Our results point to an optimal hourly light intensity for the annual phytoplankton bloom peak timing in this entire region, which could potentially become an indicator for the requirement of these annual bloom peaks.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
In the summer of 2005 an exceptional bloom of the dinoflagellate Karenia mikimotoi occurred along Ireland's Atlantic seaboard and was associated with the mass mortality of both benthic and pelagic marine life. Oxygen depletion, cellular toxicity and physical smothering, are considered to be the main factors involved in mortality. In this paper we use a theoretical approach based on stoichiometry (the Anderson ratio) and an average K. mikimotoi cellular carbon content of 329 pg C cell−1 (n = 20) to calculate the carbonaceous and nitrogenous oxygen demand following bloom collapse. The method was validated against measurements of biochemical oxygen demand and K. mikimotoi cell concentration. The estimated potential oxygen utilisation (POU) was in good agreement with field observations across a range of cell concentrations. The magnitude of POU following bloom collapse, with the exception of three coastal areas, was considered insufficient to cause harm to most marine organisms. This indicates that the widespread occurrence of mortality was primarily due to other factors such as cellular toxicity and/or mucilage production, and not oxygen depletion or related phenomena. In Donegal Bay, Kilkieran Bay and inner Dingle Bay, where cell densities were in the order of 106 cells L−1, estimated POU was sufficient to cause hypoxia. Of the three areas, Donegal Bay is considered to be the most vulnerable due to its hydrographic characteristics (seasonally stratified, weak residual flow) and hypoxic conditions (2.2 mg L−1 O2) were directly observed in the Bay post bloom collapse. Here, depending on the time of bloom collapse, depressed DO levels could persist for weeks and continue to have a potentially chronic impact on the Bay.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Toxins produced as secondary metabolites can play important roles in phytoplankton communities and contribute to the ecological success of harmful algal bloom (HAB) taxa. Toxin composition and content in phytoplankton are affected by a suite of environmental factors, including nutrient availability. Changes in nutrient availability can increase or decrease toxin content and alter toxin composition, depending on toxin stoichiometry and the mechanisms by which nutrient limitation affects toxin production. The studies that have assessed the effects of nutrient availability on brevetoxin content of the HAB species Karenia brevis have reported contradictory results, although there is growing support that nutrient limitation increases brevetoxin content. In this study, we assessed the effects of decreased nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) availability on brevetoxin content and composition of K. brevis grown in chemostats at steady state by altering the nutrient supply ratios of incoming media from the Redfield Ratio. Overall, brevetoxin content was greatest in cultures grown at the lowest rate, regardless of the nutrient supply ratio (i.e., under both Redfield and N-limiting supply ratios). Compared to cultures grown at 0.2 d−1, cultures grown at 0.1 d−1 exhibited 5-fold increases in intracellular toxin content. In contrast, at constant growth rates, N-limiting supply ratios decreased intracellular brevetoxin content by approximately one-third, although this result was significant only in cultures growing at the fastest rate of 0.23 d−1. P-limiting supply ratios had no effect on brevetoxin content or composition. In addition, when cultures grown at rates of 0.2 d−1 were supplied with balanced/Redfield N:P supply ratios, but different absolute nutrient concentrations, toxin content was greater under greater nutrient concentrations. These findings suggest that when growth rate is not nutrient limited, there is a positive relationship between nutrient availability and brevetoxin content. This work contributes to previous studies by demonstrating strong growth rates effects on brevetoxin content and that growth rate and nutrient availability can independently or together affect toxin content of K. brevis. Moreover, our work underscores the value of the chemostat as a tool to elucidate the mechanisms by which nutrient availability and growth rate affect toxin production and content of HAB species.  相似文献   

15.
Salinity is one of the serious abiotic stresses adversely affecting the majority of arable lands worldwide, limiting the crop productivity of most of the economically important crops. Sweet basil (Osmium basilicum) plants were grown in a non-saline soil (EC = 0.64 dS m−1), in low saline soil (EC = 5 dS m−1), and in a high saline soil (EC = 10 dS m−1). There were differences between arbuscular mycorrhizal (Glomus deserticola) colonized plants (+AMF) and non-colonized plants (−AMF). Mycorrhiza mitigated the reduction of K, P and Ca uptake due to salinity. The balance between K/Na and between Ca/Na was improved in +AMF plants. Growth enhancement by mycorrhiza was independent from plant phosphorus content under high salinity levels. Different growth parameters, salt stress tolerance and accumulation of proline content were investigated, these results showed that the use of mycorrhizal inoculum (AMF) was able to enhance the productivity of sweet basil plants under salinity conditions. Mycorrhizal inoculation significantly increased chlorophyll content and water use efficiency under salinity stress. The sweet basil plants appeared to have high dependency on AMF which improved plant growth, photosynthetic efficiency, gas exchange and water use efficiency under salinity stress. In this study, there was evidence that colonization with AMF can alleviate the detrimental salinity stress influence on the growth and productivity of sweet basil plants.  相似文献   

16.
An unarmored dinoflagellate bloom of Cochlodinium geminatum (Schütt) Schütt has been identified in the Pearl River Estuary, South China Sea during the severe dry season, from late October to early November, 2009, when temperature and salinity ranged between 20.0–27.2 °C and 10.6–33.4, respectively. Light and scanning electron microscopy were used to identify the characteristics of C. geminatum and provided the clear morphological structure for this species. The organism was primarily found in chains of two cells or single cell, and no longer chains were observed. Cells were irregularly spherical or slightly dorso-ventrally, with size ranged between 28 and 36 μm and longer than wide. A large nucleus in the center with numerous golden chloroplasts was present, and the cingulum made 1.5 turns around the cell. The concentration of C. geminatum ranged from 102 to greater than 107 cells l−1 during the bloom period. Nutrient concentration ranges during the bloom were 1.29–81.00 μM NO3, 0.14–12.14 μM NO2, 0.21–6.29 μM NH4, 0.23–6.26 μM PO4 and 3.29–171.43 μM SiO3, respectively. Total biomass expressed in terms of chlorophyll a ranged from 2.44 to 135.45 μg l−1, with an average 19.9 μg l−1 in surface water throughout the PRE. Two main clusters corresponding to the water sectors were defined with multivariate analysis (cluster and nMDS). Based on the composition and abundance of phytoplankton, spatial variations were observed at a significant level (ANOSIM, R = 0.44, P < 0.01). Although the pairwise correlation analysis detected no significant effect of any single environmental variable on the abundance of C. geminatum, the multivariate analysis (BIO-ENV) between biotic and abiotic variables resulted in the best variables combination with all measured factors involved (temperature, salinity, turbidity, NO3, NO2, NH4, PO4 and SiO3) which showed a combined effect during the bloom of C. geminatum in the Pearl River Estuary (ρw = 0.477).  相似文献   

17.
The diel change in dissolved oxygen concentrations were recorded with an automated incubator containing a pulsed oxygen sensor in Sarasota Bay, Florida. The deployments occurred during a ‘pre-bloom’ period in May to June 2006, and during a harmful algal bloom dominated by Karenia brevis in September 2006. The diurnal (daylight) increase in dissolved oxygen concentrations varied from 16 to 104 μmol O2 l−1 with the corresponding nocturnal decrease in oxygen varying from 16 to 77 μmol O2 l−1. Nocturnal respiration consumed 42–113% of the diurnal net oxygen production with the minimum and maximum during the pre-bloom period. Hourly production rates closely followed fluctuations in irradiance with maximum rates in the late morning. Hourly oxygen utilization rates (community respiration) at night were highest during the first few hours after sunset.  相似文献   

18.
The sensitivity of bacteria to the marine neurotoxins, brevetoxins, produced by the dinoflagellate Karenia brevis and raphidophytes Chattonella spp. remains an open question. We investigated the bacteriocidal effects of brevetoxin (PbTx-2) on the abundance and community composition of natural microbial communities by adding it to microbes from three coastal marine locations that have varying degrees of historical brevetoxin exposure: (1) Great Bay, New Jersey, (2) Rehoboth Bay, Delaware and (3) Sarasota Bay, Florida. The populations with limited or no documented exposure were more susceptible to the effects of PbTx-2 than the Gulf of Mexico populations which are frequently exposed to brevetoxins. The community with no prior documented exposure to brevetoxins showed significant (p = 0.03) changes in bacterial abundance occurring with additions greater than 2.5 μg PbTx-2 L−1. Brevetoxin concentrations during K. brevis blooms range from ∼2.5 to nearly 100 μg L−1 with typical concentrations of ∼10–30 μg L−1. In contrast to the unexposed populations, there was no significant decrease in bacterial cell number for the microbial community that was frequently exposed to brevetoxins, which implies variable sensitivity in natural communities. The diversity in the bacterial communities that were sensitive to PbTx-2 declined upon exposure. This suggests that the PbTx-2 was selecting for or against specific species. Mortality was much higher in the 200 μg PbTx-2 L−1 treatment after 48 h and >37% of the species disappeared in the bacterial communities with no documented exposure. These results suggest that toxic red tides may play a role in structuring bacterial communities.  相似文献   

19.
Marine toxic dinoflagellates of the genus Gambierdiscus are the causative agents of ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP), a form of seafood poisoning that is widespread in tropical, subtropical and temperate regions worldwide. The distributions of Gambierdiscus australes, Gambierdiscus scabrosus and two phylotypes of Gambierdiscus spp. type 2 and type 3 have been reported for the waters surrounding the main island of Japan. To explore the bloom dynamics and the vertical distribution of these Japanese species and phylotypes of Gambierdiscus, the effects of light intensity on their growth were tested, using a photoirradiation-culture system. The relationship between the observed growth rates and light intensity conditions for the four species/phylotypes were formulated at R > 0.92 (p < 0.01) using regression analysis and photosynthesis-light intensity (P-L) model. Based on this equation, the optimum light intensity (Lmax) and the semi-optimum light intensity range (Ls-opt) that resulted in the maximum growth rate (μmax) and ≥80% μ max values of the four species/phylotypes, respectively, were as follows: (1) the Lmax and Ls-opt of G. australes were 208 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and 91–422 μmol photons m−2 s−1, respectively; (2) those of G. scabrosus were 252 and 120–421 μmol photons m−2 s−1, respectively; (3) those of Gambierdiscus sp. type 2 were 192 and 75–430 μmol photons m−2 s−1, respectively; and (4) those of Gambierdiscus sp. type 3 were ≥427 and 73–427 μmol photons m−2 s−1, respectively. All four Gambierdiscus species/phylotypes required approximately 10 μmol photons m−2 s−1 to maintain growth. The light intensities in coastal waters at a site in Tosa Bay were measured vertically at 1 m intervals once per season. The relationships between the observed light intensity and depth were formulated using Beer’s Law. Based on these equations, the range of the attenuation coefficients at Tosa Bay site was determined to be 0.058–0.119 m−1. The values 1700 μmol photons m−2 s−1, 500 μmol photons m−2 s−1, and 200 μmol photons m−2 s−1 were substituted into the equations to estimate the vertical profiles of light intensity at sunny midday, cloudy midday and rainy midday, respectively. Based on the regression equations coupled with the empirically determined attenuation coefficients for each of the four seasons, the ranges of the projected depths of Lmax and Ls-opt for the four Gambierdiscus species/phylotypes under sunny midday conditions, cloudy midday conditions, and rainy midday conditions were 12–38 m and 12–54 m, 1–16 m and 1–33 m, and 0 m and 0–16 m, respectively. These results suggest that light intensity plays an important role in the bloom dynamics and vertical distribution of Gambierdiscus species/phylotypes in Japanese coastal waters.  相似文献   

20.
Brevetoxins are a family of ladder-frame polyether toxins produced by the marine dinoflagellate Karenia brevis. During blooms of K. brevis, inhalation of brevetoxins aerosolized by wind and wave action can lead to asthma-like symptoms in persons at the beach. Consumption of either shellfish or finfish contaminated by K. brevis blooms can lead to the development of neurotoxic shellfish poisoning. The toxic effects of brevetoxins are due to binding at a defined site on, and subsequent activation of, voltage-sensitive sodium channels (VSSCs) in cell membranes (site 5). In addition to brevetoxins, K. brevis produces several other ladder-frame compounds. One of these compounds, brevenal, has been shown to antagonize the effects of brevetoxin. In an effort to further characterize the effects of brevenal, a radioactive analog ([3H]-brevenol) was produced by reducing the terminal aldehyde moiety of brevenal to an alcohol using tritiated sodium borohydride. A KD of 67 nM and Bmax of 7.1 pmol/mg protein were obtained for [3H]-brevenol in rat brain synaptosomes, suggesting a 1:1 matching with VSSCs. Brevenal and brevenol competed for [3H]-brevenol binding with Ki values of 75 nM and 56 nM, respectively. However, although both brevenal and brevenol inhibited brevetoxin binding, brevetoxin was completely ineffective at competition for [3H]-brevenol binding. After examining other site-specific compounds, it was determined that [3H]-brevenol binds to a site that is distinct from the other known sites on the sodium channel, including the brevetoxin site, (site 5) although some interaction with site 5 is apparent.  相似文献   

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