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1.
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) resulting in red discoloration of coastal waters in Sepanggar Bay, off Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, East Malaysia, were first observed in January 2005. The species responsible for the bloom, which was identified as Cochlodinium polykrikoides, coincided with fish mortalities in cage-cultures. Determinations of cell density between January 2005 and June 2006 showed two peaks that occurred in March–June 2005 and June 2006. Cell abundance reached a maximum value of 6 × 106 cells L−1 at the fish cage sampling station where the water quality was characterized by high NO3–N and PO4–P concentrations. These blooms persisted into August 2005, were not detected during the north–east monsoon season and occurred again in May 2006. Favorable temperature, salinity and nutrient concentrations, which were similar to those associated with other C. polykrikoides blooms in the Asia Pacific region, likely promoted the growth of this species. Identification of C. polykrikoides as the causative organism was based on light and scanning microscopy, and confirmed by partial 18S ribosomal DNA sequences of two strains isolated during the bloom event (GenBank accession numbers DQ915169 and DQ915170).  相似文献   

2.
Red tide blooms of Cochlodinium polykrikoides in a coastal cove   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Successive blooms of the dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides occurred in Pettaquamscutt Cove, RI, persisting from September through December 1980 and again from April through October 1981. Cell densities varied from <100 cells L−1 at the onset of the bloom and reached a maximum density exceeding 3.4 × 106 cells L−1 during the summer of 1981. The bloom was mainly restricted to the mid to inner region of this shallow cove with greatest concentrations localized in surface waters of the southwestern region during summer/fall periods of both years. Highly motile cells consisting of single, double and multiple cell zooids were found as chains of 4 and 8 cells restricted to the late August/September periods. The highest cell densities occurred during periods when annual temperatures were between 19 and 28 °C and salinities between 25 and 30. A major nutrient source for the cove was Crying Brook, located at the innermost region at the head of the cove. Inorganic nitrogen (NH3 and NO2 + NO3) from the brook was continually detectable throughout the study with maximum values of 57.5 and 82.5 μmol L−1, respectively. Phosphate (PO4-P) was always present in the source waters and rarely <0.5 μmol L−1; silicate always exceeded 30 μmol L−1 with maximum concentrations reaching 226 μmol L−1. Chlorophyll a and ATP concentrations during the blooms varied directly with cell densities. Maximum Chl a levels were 218 mg m−3 and ATP-carbon was >20 g C m−3. Primary production by the dinoflagellate-dominated community during the bloom varied between 4.3 and 0.07 g C m−3 d−1. Percent carbon turnover calculated from primary production values and ATP-carbon varied from 6 to 129% d−1. The dinoflagellates dominated the entire summer period; other flagellates and diatoms were present in lesser amounts. A combination of low washout rate due to the cove dynamics, active growth, and life cycles involving cysts allowed C. polykrikoides to maintain recurrent bloom populations in this area.  相似文献   

3.
Red tides dominated by the harmful dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides have caused annual losses of USD $5–60 million to the Korean aquaculture industry annually since 1995 and a loss of USD $3 million during a 1999 net-pen fish mortality event in Canada. In order to evaluate the potential to control C. polykrikoides red tides dominated by using mass-cultured heterotrophic protistan grazers, we monitored the abundance of Strombidinopsis jeokjo (a naked ciliate) and C. polykrikoides after mass-cultured S. jeokjo was introduced into mesocosms (ca. 60 l) deployed in situ and containing natural red tide waters dominated by C. polykrikoides. Water temperature, salinity, and pH, as well as the abundance of co-occurring other protists and metazooplankton were measured concurrently. To compare the growth and ingestion rates of S. jeokjo feeding on cultured versus natural populations of C. polykrikoides, we also monitored the abundance of cultured C. polykrikoides and S. jeokjo in bottles during laboratory grazing experiments. S. jeokjo introduced into the mesocosms grew well, effectively reducing natural populations of C. polykrikoides from approximately 1000 cells ml−1 to below 10 cells ml−1 within 2 days. The growth and ingestion rates of cultured S. jeokjo on natural populations of C. polykrikoides in the mesocosms for the first 30 h (0.72 day−1 and 51 ng C grazer−1 day−1) were 84% and 44%, respectively, of those measured in the laboratory during bottle incubations with similar initial prey concentrations. The calculated grazing impact of S. jeokjo on natural populations of C. polykrikoides suggests that large-scale cultures of this ciliate could be used for controlling red tides by C. polykrikoides in small areas.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the impact of viruses, nutrient loading, and microzooplankon grazing on phytoplankton communities in two New York estuaries that hosted blooms of the brown tide alga Aureococcus anophagefferens during 2000 and 2002. The absence of a bloom at one location during 2002 allowed for the fortuitous comparison of a bloom and non-bloom year at the same location as well as a comparison of two sites experiencing bloom and non-bloom conditions during the same year. During the study, blooms were found at locations with high levels of dissolved organic nitrogen and lower nitrate concentrations compared to a non-bloom location. Experimental additions of inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus yielded growth rates within the total phytoplankton community which significantly exceeded control treatments in 83% of experiments, while A. anophagefferens experienced significantly increased growth during only 20% of experimental inorganic nutrient additions. Consistent with prior research, these results suggest brown tides are not caused by eutrophication, but instead are more likely to occur when sources of labile DOM are readily available. Microzooplankton grazing rates on the total phytoplankton community during a bloom were lower than grazing rates at a non-bloom site, and grazing rates on A. anophagefferens were lower than grazing rates on the total community on some dates, suggesting that reduced grazing mortality may also promote brown tides. Mean densities of viruses during blooms (3 × 108 ml−1) were elevated compared to most estuarine environments and were twice the levels found at a non-bloom site. Experimental enrichment of the natural viral densities yielded a significant increase in A. anophagefferens growth rates relative to control treatments when background levels of viruses were low (<1.7 × 108 ml−1), suggesting that viruses may promote bloom occurrence by regenerating DOM or altering the composition of microbial communities.  相似文献   

5.
Cochlodinium polykrikoides (p) is a planktonic dinoflagellate known to produce red tides responsible for massive fish kills and thereby serious economic loss in Korean coastal waters, particularly during summer and fall seasons. The present study involved analyzing chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) from SeaWiFS ocean color imagery collected over the period 1998–2002 to understand the spatial and temporal aspects of C. polykrikoides blooms that occurred in the enclosed and semi-enclosed bays of the Korean Southeast Sea. NOAA-AVHRR data were used to derive Sea Surface Temperature (SST) to elucidate physical factors affecting the spatial distribution and abundance of C. polykrikoides blooms. The time series of SeaWiFS-derived Chl-a gave an impression that recent red tide events with higher concentrations appeared to span more than 8 weeks during summer and fall seasons and were widespread in most of the Korean Southeast Sea coastal bays and neighboring oceanic waters. Coupled eutrophication and certain oceanic processes were thought to give rise to the formation of massive C. polykrikoides blooms with cell abundances ranging from 1000 to 30,000 cells ml−1, causing heavy mortalities of aquaculture fish and other marine organisms in these areas. Our analysis indicated that Chl-a estimates from SeaWiFS ocean color imagery appeared to be useful in demarcating the locality, spatial extent and distribution of these blooms, but unique identification of C. polykrikoides from non-bloom and sediment dominated waters remains unsuccessful with this data alone. Thus, the classical spectral enhancement and classification techniques such as Forward Principal Component Analysis (FPCA) and Minimum Spectral Distance (MSD) to uniquely identify and better understand C. polykrikoides blooms characteristics from other optical water types were attempted on both low spatial resolution SeaWiFS ocean color imagery and high spatial resolution Landsat-7 ETM+ imagery. Application of these techniques could capture intricate and striking patterns of C. polykrikoides blooms from surrounding non-bloom and sediment dominated waters, providing improved capability of detecting, predicting and monitoring C. polykrikoides bloom in such optically complex waters. The result obtained from MSD classification showed that retrieval of C. polykrikoides bloom from the mixed phase of this bloom with turbid waters was not feasible with the SeaWiFS ocean color imagery, but feasible with Landsat-7 ETM+ imagery that provided more accurate and comparable spatial C. polykrikoides patterns consistent with in situ observations. The dense phase of the bloom estimated from these imageries occupied an area of more than 25 km2 around the coastal bays and the mixed phase extended over several hundreds kilometers towards the Southeast Sea offshore due to exchange of water masses caused by coastal and oceanic processes. Sea surface temperature analyzed from AVHRR infrared data captured the northeastward flow of Tsushima Warm Current (TWC) waters that provided favorable environmental conditions for the rapid growth and subsequent southward initiation of C. polykrikoides blooms in hydrodynamically active regions in the Korean Southeast Sea offshore.  相似文献   

6.
The recognition of an apparent association between seasonal oyster spat mortalities (up to 40%) and high Prorocentrum rhathymum density in the Little Swanport Estuary, Tasmania, prompted further experimental investigation into the toxicity by this dinoflagellate. Standard brine shrimp, haemolysis assays and intraperitoneal mouse bioassays revealed fast acting toxins in methanol but not aqueous extracts of P. rhathymum, with mice dying in less than 20 min. Oyster bioassays involved feeding spat (4 mm shell width) for 21 consecutive days on a diet of cultured P. rhathymum at simulated bloom densities (104 cells ml−1). No oyster mortality was observed, however, histopathological signs of thin, dilated gut tubules and sloughing of gut cells resembled those seen in affected field samples. In contrast to field samples, gill pathology was also observed in experimental exposure oysters.  相似文献   

7.
8.
You Wang  Xuexi Tang   《Harmful algae》2008,7(1):65-75
Interactions between Prorocentrum donghaiense Lu and Scrippsiella trochoidea (Stein) Loeblich III, two species of causative bloom dinoflagellates in China, were investigated using bi-algal cultures under controlled laboratory conditions. The growth of P. donghaiense and S. trochoidea were significantly suppressed when the initial cell densities were set at 1.9 × 104 cells mL−1 or 1.9 × 105 cells mL−1 for P. donghaiense and 1.0 × 104 cells mL−1 for S. trochoidea when the initial size/density ratio was 1:1 or 10:1, respectively, but no out-competement was observed in either bi-algal culture by the end. The simultaneous assay on the culture filtrate showed that P. donghaiense filtrate prepared at a lower initial density (1.9 × 104 cells mL−1) stimulated the co-cultured S. trochoidea at a density of 1.0 × 104 cells mL−1, but filtrate at a higher density (1.9 × 105 cells mL−1) depressed its growth. Differently, the filtrate of S. trochoidea at a density of 1.0 × 104 cells mL−1 significantly suppressed the growth of P. donghaiense at a density of 1.9 × 104 cells mL−1, but had little stimulatory effect on P. donghaiense at a density of 1.9 × 105 cells mL−1compared to the control (P > 0.05). It is likely that these two species of microalgae interact with each other mainly by releasing allelochemical substance(s) into the culture medium, and a direct cell-to-cell contact was not necessary for their mutual interaction. We then quantify their interactions in the bi-algal culture by using a mathematical model. The estimated parameters from the model showed that the inhibition exerted by S. trochoidea on P. donghaiense was about 43 and 24 times stronger than the inhibitory effect that P. donghaiense exerted on S. trochoidea when the initial size/density were 1:1 and 10:1, respectively. S. trochoidea seemed to have a survival strategy that was superior to P. donghaiense in the bi-algal culture under controlled laboratory conditions. We also observed a closely positive relationship between the initial cell density and its effect on the co-cultured microalga by measuring the fluorenscence: filtrate prepared from higher initial cell density had stronger interference on the co-cultured microalga. Moreover, pre-treated under different temperature conditions (30 °C, 60 °C and 100 °C) would significantly changed the effect of culture filtrate on the co-cultured microalga. Result inferred that P. donghaiense or S. trochoidea would release allelochemicals into the bi-algal culture medium and the allelochemicals might be a mixture with temperature-sensitive components in it.  相似文献   

9.
The occurrence and toxicity of Amphidinium carterae Hulburt is hereby reported for the first time from the North Arabian Sea on the coast of Pakistan. The concentrations of 1.2 × 104 cells ml−1 were found in intertidal pools that were also inhabited by the brown macroalga Sargassum wightii. Both wild and cultured A. carterae cells were tested for ciguatera toxicity through exposure to brine shrimp nauplii (Artemia salina) and albino mice. Although the brine shrimp did not appear to be affected mortalities in mice ranged between 13 and 16% at doses of 7.2 × 104 and 2.5 × 105 cells ml−1, respectively. When mice were affected pharmacological effects such as muscle contraction in lower back area, increased respiration, immobility and paralysis in hind limbs were observed for 2 h. These effects appeared to be reversible and gradually disappeared within 24 h.  相似文献   

10.
Cochlodinium polykrikoides is a globally distributed, ichthyotoxic, bloom-forming dinoflagellate. Blooms of C. polykrikoides manifest themselves as large (many km2) and distinct patches with cell densities exceeding 103 ml−1 while water adjacent to these patches can have low cell densities (<100 cells ml−1). While the effect of these blooms on fish and shellfish is well-known, their impacts on microbial communities and biogeochemical cycles are poorly understood. Here, we investigated plankton communities and the cycling of carbon, nitrogen, and B-vitamins within blooms of C. polykrikoides and compared them to areas in close proximity (<100 m) with low C. polykrikoides densities. Within blooms, C. polykrikoides represented more than 90% of microplankton (>20 μm) cells, and there were significantly more heterotrophic bacteria and picoeukaryotic phytoplankton but fewer Synechococcus. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of 16S and 18S rRNA genes revealed significant differences in community composition between bloom and non-bloom samples. Inside the bloom patches, concentrations of vitamin B12 were significantly lower while concentrations of dissolved oxygen were significantly higher. Carbon fixation and nitrogen uptake rates were up to ten times higher within C. polykrikoides bloom patches. Ammonium was a more important source of nitrogen, relative to nitrate and urea, for microplankton within bloom patches compared to non-bloom communities. While uptake rates of vitamin B1 were similar in bloom and non-bloom samples, vitamin B12 was taken up at rates five-fold higher (>100 pmol−1 L−1 d−1) in bloom samples, resulting in turn-over times of hours during blooms. This high vitamin demand likely led to the vitamin B12 limitation of C. polykrikoides observed during nutrient amendment experiments conducted with bloom water. Collectively, this study revealed that C. polykrikoides blooms fundamentally change microbial communities and accelerate the cycling of carbon, some nutrients, and vitamin B12.  相似文献   

11.
The rate of growth of juvenile hard clams, Mercenaria mercenaria, was studied in the Coastal Bays of Maryland during an outbreak of the brown tide, Aureococcus anophagefferens. Brown tide dominated the plankton community during the month of June 2002, with cell densities at several sites reaching category 3 (>200,000 cells ml−1) levels. Temperatures during the bloom were 18.6–27.5 °C. Nutrient conditions preceding and during the bloom were conducive for the proliferation of A. anophagefferens: while inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus were <1 μg at N or P l−1, urea was elevated during bloom development. Organic nitrogen, phosphorus and carbon were in the range of levels observed in previous brown tide blooms and increased following the collapse of the bloom. Growth rates of juvenile clams were significantly lower during the period of the brown tide bloom than following its collapse. Growth rates of M. mercenaria were found to be negatively impacted at brown tide densities as low as 20,000 cells ml−1, or category 1 levels. The low growth rates of M. mercenaria could not be explained by temperature, as the lowest growth rates were found when water temperatures were at levels previously found to be optimal for growth.  相似文献   

12.
The occurrence and morphology of the potentially toxic dinoflagellate species Alexandrium minutum found for the first time in Jamaica, were examined and described by light and scanning electron microscopy. Classical morphological examinations of whole cells, the thecal plate pattern of intact cells and more importantly the structure of individual thecal plates of squashed cells, were conducted in an attempt to positively identify the species. Characteristics such as a tear-drop shaped apical pore plate with a comma-shaped apical pore and no anterior attachment pore; a narrow sixth precingular plate; a narrow anterior sulcal plate longer than or approximately as long as it is wide; and a posterior sulcal plate wider than long, confirmed the Jamaican species as A. minutum. This dinoflagellate which produces potent neurotoxins responsible for paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) in humans in many parts of the World, as well as mass mortality of various marine flora and fauna, was identified in water samples collected during an extensive bloom of the species in the brackish to saline water body of Hunts Bay, an estuarine arm of Kingston Harbour, Jamaica in August 1994. The highest cell concentration was 4.6 × 105 cells l−1, a concentration which far exceeds acceptable concentrations (<103 cells l−1) of PSP-toxin producing A. minutum in several countries including: Spain and Denmark. No PSP human symptoms were reported during the bloom; however it was accompanied by a large kill of small pelagic fish extending across a third of the bay. Since then, smaller blooms of A. minutum have occurred with the most recent in February and April 2004. Hunts Bay is an important fishing, shrimping and to some extent oyster/mussel collection area and provides an important source of livelihood and food for many fishermen in nearby fishing communities as well as an important source of food for members of other communities. Although there are no known records of human illness due to PSP in Jamaica, the occurrence and blooming in Jamaican waters of this potentially toxic dinoflagellate, is great cause for concern.  相似文献   

13.
Blooms of benthic dinoflagellates belonging to the tropical genus Ostreopsis are an increasingly common phenomenon in temperate regions worldwide. This is reflected in the rapid upsurge of publications on Ostreopsis from temperate regions since 2000. Relatively little is known about these blooms or their effects on other organisms. An unprecedented bloom of Ostreopsis siamensis occurred on shallow reefs in northern New Zealand in 2004 providing an opportunity to examine the dynamics of an O. siamensis bloom and its effect on community structuring sea urchins (Evechinus chloroticus). The bloom occurred following a period of calm sea conditions with warmer than average water temperatures. The cover of O. siamensis was highly ephemeral and strongly related to temporal and spatial variation in wave action. Blooms were most prevalent at sites protected from prevailing swells where O. siamensis covered 30–60% of the reef with the concentrations on macroalgae reaching 1.4 × 106 cells g−1 wet weight, some of the highest recorded worldwide. Surveys of the health of sea urchins in relation to the cover of O. siamensis suggested strong negative effects on this ecologically important herbivore and urchin densities declined by 56–60% at bloom sites over the study period. Further research is needed to examine the factors controlling the distribution and intensity of this new phenomenon, and into the ecological effects of such blooms on marine communities and the potential mechanisms responsible.  相似文献   

14.
Karlodinium veneficum is a common member of temperate, coastal phytoplankton assemblages that occasionally forms blooms associated with fish kills. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the cytotoxic and ichthyotoxic compounds produced by K. veneficum, karlotoxins, can have anti-grazing properties against the heterotrophic dinoflagellate, Oxyrrhis marina. The sterol composition of O. marina (>80% cholesterol) renders it sensitive to karlotoxin, and does not vary substantially when fed different algal diets even for prey that are resistant to karlotoxin. At in situ bloom concentrations (104–105 K. veneficum ml−1), grazing rates (cells ingested per Oxyrrhis h−1) on toxic K. veneficum strain CCMP 2064 were 55% that observed on the non-toxic K. veneficum strain MD5. At lower prey concentrations typical of in situ non-bloom levels (<103 cells ml−1), grazing rates (cells ingested per Oxyrrhis h−1) on toxic K. veneficum strain CCMP 2064 were 70–80% of rates on non-toxic strain MD5. Growth of O. marina was significantly suppressed when fed the toxic strain of K. veneficum. Experiments with mixed prey cultures, where non-toxic strain MD5 was fluorescently stained, showed that the presence of toxic strain CCMP 2064 inhibited grazing of O. marina on the co-occurring non-toxic strain MD5. Exogenous addition of a sub-lethal dose (100 ng ml−1) of purified karlotoxin inhibited grazing of O. marina by approximately 50% on the non-toxic K. veneficum strain MD5 or the cryptophyte S. major. These results identify karlotoxin as an anti-grazing compound for those grazers with appropriate sterol composition (i.e., desmethyl sterols). This strategy is likely to be an important mechanism whereby growth of K. veneficum is uncoupled from losses due to grazing, allowing it to form ichthyotoxic blooms in situ.  相似文献   

15.
A series of experiments was conducted to examine effects of four strains of the estuarine dinoflagellate, Pfiesteria shumwayae, on the behavior and survival of larval and adult shellfish (bay scallop, Argopecten irradians; eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica; northern quahogs, Mercenaria mercenaria; green mussels, Perna viridis [adults only]). In separate trials with larvae of A. irradians, C. virginica, and M. mercenaria, an aggressive predatory response of three strains of algal- and fish-fed P. shumwayae was observed (exception, algal-fed strain 1024C). Larval mortality resulted primarily from damage inflicted by physical attack of the flagellated cells, and secondarily from Pfiesteria toxin, as demonstrated in larval C. virginica exposed to P. shumwayae with versus without direct physical contact. Survival of adult shellfish and grazing activity depended upon the species and the cell density, strain, and nutritional history of P. shumwayae. No mortality of the four shellfish species was noted after 24 h of exposure to algal- or fish-fed P. shumwayae (strains 1024C, 1048C, and CCMP2089) in separate trials at ≤5 × 103 cells ml−1, whereas higher densities of fish-fed, but not algal-fed, populations (>7–8 × 103 cells ml−1) induced low (≤15%) but significant mortality. Adults of all four shellfish species sustained >90% mortality when exposed to fish-fed strain 270A1 (8 × 103 cells ml−1). In contrast, adult M. mercenaria and P. viridis exposed to a similar density of fish-fed strain 2172C sustained <15% mortality, and there was no mortality of A. irradians and C. virginica exposed to that strain. In mouse bioassays with tissue homogenates (adductor muscle, mantle, and whole animals) of A. irradians and M. mercenaria that had been exposed to P. shumwayae (three strains, separate trials), mice experienced several minutes of disorientation followed by recovery. Mice injected with tissue extracts from control animals fed cryptomonads showed no response. Grazing rates of adult shellfish on P. shumwayae (mean cell length ±1 standard error [S.E.], 9 ± 1 μm) generally were significantly lower when fed fish-fed (toxic) populations than when fed populations that previously had been maintained on algal prey, and grazing rates were highest with the nontoxic cryptomonad, Storeatula major (cell length 7 ± 1 μm). Abundant cysts of P. shumwayae were found in fecal strands of all shellfish species tested, and ≤45% of the feces produced viable flagellated cells when placed into favorable culture conditions. These findings were supported by a field study wherein fecal strands collected from field-collected adult shellfish (C. virginica, M. mercenaria, and ribbed mussels, Geukensia demissa) were confirmed to contain cysts of P. shumwayae, and these cysts produced fish-killing flagellated populations in standardized fish bioassays. Thus, predatory feeding by flagellated cells of P. shumwayae can adversely affect survival of larval bivalve molluscs, and grazing can be depressed when adult shellfish are fed P. shumwayae. The data suggest that P. shumwayae could affect recruitment of larval shellfish in estuaries and aquaculture facilities; shellfish can be adversely affected via reduced filtration rates; and adult shellfish may be vectors of toxic P. shumwayae when shellfish are transported from one geographic location to another.  相似文献   

16.
Substantial mortalities of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) at two aquaculture sites in Long Island Sound, off Grand Manan Island, Bay of Fundy (BoF) (New Brunswick, Canada) in September 2003, were associated with a bloom of Alexandrium fundyense (>3 × 105 cells L−1), a dinoflagellate alga that produces toxins which cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP). Cells of A. fundyense collected from surface waters while fish were dying had total paralytic shellfish (PS) toxin concentrations of 70.6 pg STX equiv. (saxitoxin equivalents) cell−1 and PS toxin profiles rich in carbamate toxins (78.2%). The zooplankton sampled contained PS toxins (63.1 pg STX equiv. g−1 wet wt) and the toxin profile matched that of A. fundyense cells.Mean PS toxin levels were low (<4 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt) in stomach, gill and muscle tissues of moribund salmon, suggesting that PS toxins are very lethal to salmon.The PS toxin concentrations in blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) growing on the salmon cages (37; 526 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt) were the highest recorded to date from this region. Their PS toxin profiles showed enhanced carbamate contents (85.5%) compared with that found in A. fundyense. Blue mussels collected from an adjacent Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) monitoring site in Grand Manan had PS toxin concentrations of 4214 and 150 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt in late September and December, respectively, well above the regulatory limit (RL), and horse mussels (Modiolus modiolus) collected in late September had PS toxin concentrations of 2357 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt. Detoxification under laboratory conditions suggested that blue mussels may require up to 19 weeks for elimination below RL when they accumulate these high concentrations of PS toxins. This depuration period may be shorter in the field.PS toxin levels above RL were detected in hepatopancreatic tissues of lobster (Homarus americanus), with lower levels (<16 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt) in tail muscle and gills.These results illustrate the movement of PS toxins through the marine food chain following an A. fundyense bloom in the BoF, and support earlier studies suggesting that kills from the region of zooplanktivorous fish, such as herring (Clupea harengus harengus), can be attributed to blooms of A. fundyense. This is the first reported incident of PSP associated with mortalities of caged Atlantic salmon in the BoF. Analyses of muscle tissues and viscera from the affected salmon indicated that any portion would not be a health hazard if consumed.  相似文献   

17.
A novel assay method using nuclease protection assay integrated with sandwich hybridization (NPA-SH) for qualitative and quantitative detection of microalgae has been developed. Two species-specific nuclease-protection-assay (NPA) probes targeted 28S ribosomal RNA of Prorocentrum minimum and Prorocentrum micans, respectively, were designed in this study. The assay consists of S1 nuclease protection, sandwich hybridization and signal detection. The specificity of the probes was verified with cultured algae in the laboratory and field sample from Jiaozhou Bay, and the quantity by NPA-SH analysis showed good agreement with that of cell-counting with a light microscope. The optical absorbance of probe binding on the target showed good linear fit with cell amount. A standard curve for P. minimum was established to correlate the optical absorbance to cell density on a basis in the linear range between 15 and 475 cells ml−1 seawater, and the equation deducted was ‘y = 0.0053 × x + 0.0658’ (R2 = 0.992, n = 4). The assay was sensitive to detect 15 cells ml−1 seawater. And for P. micans, with linear range between 0.6 and 20 cells ml−1 seawater, the equation deducted was ‘y = 0.1174 × x + 0.1106’ (R2 = 0.996, n = 4); the assay was sensitive to detect less than 1 cell ml−1 seawater. The inter-assay coefficients of variation (CVs) were 12.4 and 10.9%, respectively. The good specificity, sensitivity and reproducibility of the NPA-SH implied that this new technique could be extremely useful for qualitative and quantitative assay of P. minimum and P. micans at low abundance.  相似文献   

18.
Potentially toxic cyanobacterial blooms are becoming common in the Brazilian reservoirs in all regions of the country. During October 2004, a dense bloom of cyanobacteria occurred in the Monjolinho Reservoir (São Carlos, São Paulo State, Brazil) and a significant amount of cyanobacterial material accumulated on the water surface. Phytoplankton analysis showed that the main species in this bloom were Anabaena circinalis and Anabaena spiroides. Cladoceran (Ceriodaphnia dubia and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii) and mouse bioassays were performed to detect toxic products in extracts of the natural samples collected at the three different dates during in short period. To prepare the extracts, freeze-dried cells were dispersed in distilled water and subjected to repeated freeze/thaw cycles and sonication and centrifuging processes. Crude extracts were toxic both to cladocerans (LC50 94–406 mg freeze-dried cells L−1) and mice (indicative LD50 297–445 mg freeze-dried cells kg−1) and the toxicity of the bloom increased for cladocerans during the occurrence of the bloom. Toxin analysis by ELISA revealed that microcystin (MC) was found in the water of the reservoir (concentrations ranging from 28 to 45 μg L−1). In addition, microcystin was also found in freeze-dried cyanobacteria cells with concentrations ranging from 138 to 223 μg g−1. On the other hand, neurotoxins (saxitoxin and gonyautoxin) were not detected in any of the natural samples by HPLC. Signs of toxicity in mice did not indicate whether the bloom samples were predominantly hepatotoxic or neurotoxic. It is known that natural Anabaena blooms can contain other toxic compounds besides microcystins and neurotoxins such as lipopolysaccharides or other toxins not identified or known. Methods of detecting cyanotoxins used in this study were insufficient to clarify the toxicological features of Anabaena bloom and indicated that other methods should be investigated.  相似文献   

19.
A massive fish kill and water discoloration were reported off the western coast of Puerto Princesa, Palawan, Philippines in March 2005. Phytoplankton analysis revealed a near monospecific bloom of the dinoflagellate, Cochlodinium polykrikoides, with cell concentrations ranging from 2.5 × 105 to 3.2 × 106 cells per liter. Ground truth data were supplemented by processed satellite images from MODIS Aqua Level 2 data (1 km resolution) from January to April 2005, which revealed high surface chlorophyll-a levels (up to 50 mg/m3) offshore of west and southwest Palawan as early as February 2005. The bloom extended 310 km in length and 80 km in width at its peak in March off the central coast (Puerto Princesa). By April, the bloom declined in intensity, but was still apparent along the northern coast (El Nido). Fluctuations in chlorophyll levels off the western coast of Sabah, Malaysia and Brunei during this time period suggested that the bloom was not limited to the coast of Palawan. Satellite imagery from Sabah in late January revealed a plume of chl-a that is believed to be the source of the C. polykrikoides bloom in Palawan. This plume drifted offshore, advected northward via the basin-wide counterclockwise gyre, and reached nutrient-rich, upwelled waters near Palawan (due to a positive wind stress curl) where the dinoflagellate bloomed and persisted for 2 months from March to April 2005.  相似文献   

20.
The goal of this study was to test for, and partially characterize, toxic activity associated with the dinoflagellate Karlodinium micrum. Since 1996, three fish kill events associated with blooms of K. micrum have occurred at HyRock Fish Farm, an estuarine pond aquaculture facility raising hybrid striped bass on the Chesapeake Bay, MD, USA. Using an assay based on the lysis of rainbow trout erythrocytes, cultures of a Chesapeake Bay isolate of K. micrum have been shown to produce toxic substances which are released upon cell disturbance or damage. The LC50 for hemolysis of a sonicated cell suspension was 2.4×104 cells ml−1, well within the range of cell concentrations observed associated with fish kills. The toxic activity from K. micrum cells and culture filtrates was traced to two distinct fractions that co-elute with polar lipids. The LC50 for hemolysis of the larger of these two fractions (Tox A) was 284 ng ml−1 while the LC50 of the second, smaller, fraction (Tox B) was 600 ng ml−1. For comparison, the LC50 for the standard hemolysin saponin was 3203 ng ml−1. At concentrations of 800 and 2000 ng ml−1, respectively, Tox A was further shown to be ichthyotoxic to zebrafish (Danio rerio) larvae (80% mortality), and cytotoxic to a mammalian GH(4)C(1) cell line (100% LDH release). At a concentration of 600 ng ml−1 Tox B was shown to be cytotoxic to a mammalian GH(4)C(1) cell line (>30% LDH release), but not ichthyotoxic to zebrafish (D. rerio) larvae up to a concentration of 250 ng ml−1. Although treatment with either algicidal copper or potassium permanganate caused significant lysis of K. micrum cells (>70%), toxic activity was released after treatment with copper and eliminated following treatment with potassium permanganate. This observation in cultures is consistent with observations made at HyRock Fish Farm where significantly higher mortality was observed following treatment of a K. micrum bloom with copper sulfate compared to treatment with potassium permanganate. This study represents the first direct evidence of the toxicity of K. micrum isolated from the Chesapeake Bay.  相似文献   

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