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1.
Massive fish kills caused by bloom‐forming species of the Raphidophyceae occur in many marine coastal areas and often cause significant economic losses. The ultrastructure and phylogeny of marine raphidophytes from the Brazilian coast have not been fully analyzed. Here, we present the first combined morphological and genetic characterization of raphidophyte strains from the Brazilian coast. Ten strains of four raphidophyte species (Chattonella subsalsa, C. antiqua, Heterosigma akashiwo, and Fibrocapsa japonica) were characterized based on morphology (including ultrastructure) and LSU rDNA sequences. Chattonella subsalsa and C. antiqua formed two distinct genetic clades. We found that the cell size is the only phenotypic feature separating C. subsalsa and C. antiqua strains from Brazil, whereas traditional characteristics used for species separation in the genus Chattonella (i.e., tail size, chloroplast presence in the tail, ‘oboe‐shaped’ mucocysts, and presence of thylakoids in the pyrenoid matrix) were not sufficiently discriminative, due to their overlapping in the two taxa. The phylogenetic analysis indicated intra‐specific geographic differences among C. subsalsa sequences, with two subclades: one formed by isolates from Brazil, USA, and Iran, and another by a sequence from the Adriatic Sea (Italy). Fibrocapsa japonica also showed intra‐specific geographic differences, with a sequence from a Brazilian strain grouped with strains from Japan, Australia, and Germany, all of them distinct from the Italian isolates. This is the first combined morphological and phylogenetic analysis of raphidophytes from the South Atlantic. Our findings broaden knowledge of the biodiversity of this important bloom‐forming algal group.  相似文献   

2.
The red tide dinoflagellate Karenia brevis blooms annually along the eastern Gulf of Mexico, USA, and is often linked to significant economic losses through massive fish kills, shellfish harvest closures, and the potential threat to humans of neurotoxic shellfish poisonings as well as exposure to aerosolized toxin. As part of an effort to enhance the strategies employed to manage and mitigate these events and their adverse effects, several approaches are being investigated for controlling blooms. Previous studies have established the presence of algicidal bacteria lethal to K. brevis in these waters, and we aim to characterize bacterial–algal interactions, evaluate their role as natural regulators of K. brevis blooms, and ultimately assess possible management applications. Herein, the algicidal activity of a newly isolated Cytophaga/Flavobacterium/Bacteroidetes (CFB)-bacterium, strain S03, and a previously described CFB-bacterium, strain 41-DBG2, was evaluated against various harmful algal bloom (HAB) and non-HAB species (23 total), including multiple clones of K. brevis, to evaluate algal target specificity. Strains S03 and 41-DBG2, which employ direct and indirect modes of algicidal lysis, respectively, killed 20% and 40% of the bacteria-containing isolates tested. Interestingly, no bacteria-free algal cultures were resistant to algicidal attack, whereas susceptibility varied occasionally among bacteria-containing isolates of a single algal taxon originating from either the same or different geographic location. The dynamics of K. brevis culture death appeared to differ according to whether the algicidal bacterium did or did not require direct contact with algal cells, with the former most rapidly affecting K. brevis morphology and causing cell lysis. Both bacterial strains promoted the formation of a small number of cyst-like structures in the K. brevis cultures, possibly analogous to temporary cysts formed by other dinoflagellates exposed to certain types of stress. Results were also consistent with earlier work demonstrating that bacterial assemblages from certain cultures can confer resistance to attack by algicidal bacteria, again indicating the complexity and importance of microbial interactions, and the need to consider carefully the potential for using such bacteria in management activities.  相似文献   

3.
Toxic dinoflagellate blooms have increased in estuaries of the east coast of the United States in recent years, and the discovery of Pfiesteria piscicida has brought renewed attention to the problem of harmful algal blooms (HAB) in general. Many bacteria and viruses have been isolated that have algicidal or algistatic effects on phytoplankton, including HAB species. Twenty-two bacterial isolates from the Delaware Inland Bays were screened for algicidal activity. One isolate (Shewanella IRI-160) had a growth-inhibiting effect on all three dinoflagellate species tested, including P. piscicida (potentially toxic zoospores), Prorocentrum minimum, and Gyrodinium uncatenum. This bacterium did not have a negative effect on the growth of any of the other four common estuarine non-dinoflagellate species tested, and in fact had a slight stimulatory effect on a diatom, a prasinophyte, a cryptophyte, and a raphidophyte. Shewanella IRI-160 is the first non-microzooplankton example of a microbe with the ability to control and inhibit the growth of P. piscicida, suggesting that bacteria in the natural environment could play a role in controlling the growth and abundance of P. piscicida and other dinoflagellates. Such bacteria could also potentially be used as management tools to prevent the proliferation of potentially harmful dinoflagellates in estuaries and coastal waters.  相似文献   

4.
Recent novel mixed blooms of several species of toxic raphidophytes have caused fish kills and raised health concerns in the highly eutrophic Inland Bays of Delaware, USA. The factors that control their growth and dominance are not clear, including how these multi-species HAB events can persist without competitive exclusion occurring. We compared and contrasted the relative environmental niches of sympatric Chattonella subsalsa and Heterosigma akashiwo isolates from the bays using classic Monod-type experiments. C. subsalsa grew over a temperature range from 10 to 30 °C and a salinity range of 5–30 psu, with optimal growth occurring from 20 to 30 °C and 15 to 25 psu. H. akashiwo had similar upper temperature and salinity tolerances but also lower limits, with growth occurring from 4 to 30 °C and 5 to 30 psu and optimal growth between 16 and 30 °C and 10 and 30 psu. These culture results were confirmed by field observations of bloom occurrences in the Inland Bays. Maximum nutrient-saturated growth rates (μmax) for C. subsalsa were 0.6 d−1 and half-saturation concentrations for growth (Ks) were 9 μM for nitrate, 1.5 μM for ammonium, and 0.8 μM for phosphate. μmax of H. akashiwo (0.7 d−1) was slightly higher than C. subsalsa, but Ks values were nearly an order of magnitude lower at 0.3 μM for nitrate, 0.3 μM for ammonium, and 0.2 μM for phosphate. H. akashiwo is able to grow on urea but C. subsalsa cannot, while both can use glutamic acid. Cell yield experiments at environmentally relevant levels suggested an apparent preference by C. subsalsa for ammonium as a nitrogen source, while H. akashiwo produced more biomass on nitrate. Light intensity affected both species similarly, with the same growth responses for each over a range from 100 to 600 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Factors not examined here may allow C. subsalsa to persist during multi-species blooms in the bays, despite being competitively inferior to H. akashiwo under most conditions of nutrient availability, temperature, and salinity.  相似文献   

5.
Delaware’s Inland Bays (DIB) are subject to numerous mixed blooms of harmful raphidophytes each year, and Heterosigma akashiwo is one of the consistently occurring species. Often, Chattonella subsalsa, C. cf. verruculosa, and Fibrocapsa japonica co-occur with H. akashiwo, indicating a dynamic consortium of raphidophyte species. In this study, microzooplankton grazing pressure was assessed as a top–down control mechanism on H. akashiwo populations in mixed communities. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) with species-specific primers and probes were used in conjunction with the dilution method to assess grazing pressure on H. akashiwo and other raphidophytes. As a comparison, we measured changes in chlorophyll a (chl a) to determine whole community growth and mortality caused by grazing. We detected grazing on H. akashiwo using QPCR in samples where chl a analyses indicated little or no grazing on the total phytoplankton community. Overall, specific microzooplankton grazing pressure on H. akashiwo ranged from 0.88 to 1.88 day−1 at various sites. Experiments conducted on larger sympatric raphidophytes (C. subsalsa, C. cf. verruculosa and F. japonica) demonstrated no significant microzooplankton grazing on these species. Grazing pressure on H. akashiwo may provide a competitive advantage to other raphidophytes such as Chattonella spp. that are too large to be consumed at high rates by microzooplankton and help to shape the dynamics of this harmful algal bloom consortium. Our results show that QPCR can be used in conjunction with the dilution method for evaluation of microzooplankton grazing pressure on specific phytoplankton species within a mixed community. An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

6.
Over the last three years, several blooms of Heterosigma akashiwo (Raphidophyceae) were documented in South Carolina (SC) brackish waters, including areas containing extensive oyster (Crassostrea virginica) beds. This study examined the sublethal effects of H. akashiwo on C. virginica, based on cellular biomarker responses after exposure to laboratory cultures of H. akashiwo isolated from SC waters, and to water collected from two SC H. akashiwo blooms. Exposure to laboratory cultures or blooms of H. akashiwo significantly increased oyster hepatopancreas lysosomal destabilization rates, but had little effect on gill p-glycoprotein (p-gp) expression. Lysosomal destabilization in oysters continued to increase even after a 7-day recovery period in clean seawater, suggesting that H. akashiwo toxin or other cellular byproducts continued to damage the hepatopancreas. These results suggest that even short-term exposures of oysters to high cell densities of H. akashiwo could have long-term adverse physiological effects, and imply that oyster health may be compromised in areas where repetitive H. akashiwo blooms occur.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this study was to isolate and identify algicidal bacteria against the dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides, and to determine the algicidal activity and algicidal range. During the declining period of C. polykrikoides blooms, seven algicidal bacteria were isolated. The algicidal bacteria against C. polykrikoides were enumerated using the most probable number (MPN) method. The number of algicidal bacteria was high (3.7 × 103 mL−1). Algicidal bacteria were identified on the basis of biochemical and chemotaxonomic characteristics, and analysis of 16S rDNA sequences. Seven algicidal bacteria isolated in this study belonged to the genera Bacillus, Dietzia, Janibacter, and Micrococcus. The most algicidal bacterium, designated Micrococcus luteus SY-13, is assumed to produce secondary metabolites. When 5% culture filtrate of this strain was applied to C. polykrikoides cultures, over 90% of C. polykrikoides cells were destroyed within 6 h. M. luteus SY-13 showed significant algicidal activities against C. polykrikoides and a wide algicidal range against various harmful algal bloom (HAB) species. Taken together, our results suggest that M. luteus SY-13 could be a candidate for controlling HABs.  相似文献   

8.
Noxious red tides of the dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides tend to be long lasting and cause mass mortalities of cultured and natural fish and invertebrates along the western coast of Japan and the southern coast of Korea. In order to assess the tolerance of C. polykrikoides to attack by algicidal bacteria, the effects of algicidal bacteria strains on the growth of three C. polykrikoides strains were examined in laboratory culture experiments. Algicidal bacteria used were two strains of Cytophaga (J18/M01 and AA8-2, direct attack type and wide prey range), three strains of Alteromonas (S, K, D) and one strain of Pseudoalteromonas (R, indirect attack type), which were all isolated by using Chattonella antiqua as a prey organism. Neither Cytophaga strain showed any algicidal activity. In the cases of Alteromonas and Pseudoalteromonas, some cultures of C. polykrikoides were killed, but at least 10 days or more were required for the death of this dinoflagellate. C. polykrikoides survived in the presence of algicidal bacteria in concentrations up to 106–107 cells ml−1, which is enough for other red tide microalgae to be killed. On the contrary, the algicidal effects of bacteria on C. antiqua were detected clearly within a few days. These results imply that C. polykrikoides is resistant to the six algicidal bacteria examined, which may reflect the capacity for mixotrophy. This resistance of C. polykrikoides to algicidal bacteria could provide a selective advantage for survival compared to other microalgae susceptible to attack by algicidal bacteria and hence prolong red tides caused by this harmful dinoflagellate.  相似文献   

9.
Fatty acid and sterol profiles allowed for clear discrimination betweentheraphidophyte genera Chattonella,Heterosigma, Fibrocapsa andOlisthodiscus, but exhibited little differentiation forindividual Chattonella species(C.marina, C. antiqua and C.subsalsa). Sterol and fatty acid profiles do not support theseparation of Chattonella antiqua and C.marina as distinct species. Ecophenotypic variations in lipidprofiles were also observed between Chattonella strainsfromdifferent geographic locations. Sterol signatures which may be useful aschemotaxonomic markers were: the absence of C27 sterols (cholesteroland 24-dihydrozymosterol) in Heterosigma akashiwo; thepresence of isofucosterol in Chattonella; and theoccurrence of brassicasterol, poriferasterol and fucosterol inOlisthodiscus luteus. High levels of eicosapentaenoic acid(EPA; 17-27% of fatty acids) were present in all raphidophyte species. Lipidcomposition correlated more closely to recent molecular classification ofraphidophytes than carotenoid pigments.  相似文献   

10.
A bacterial strain, HAK-13, exhibited strongest activity against Heterosigma akashiwo and was capable of controlling this bloom forming phytoplankton. Based on 16S rDNA sequences and biochemical and morphological characteristics, the strain HAK-13 was determined to be Pseudomonas fluorescens on the basis of 99.9% similarity with reference strains in the DNA databases. The growth of H. akashiwo was strongly suppressed by HAK-13 in all growth phases, with the strongest alga-lytic activity noted against harmful bloom-forming species in the exponential stage (6–22 days). Host range tests showed that HAK-13 also significantly inhibited the growth of Alexandrium tamarense and Cochlodinium polykrikoides but could not destroy Gymnodinium catenatum. P. fluorescens HAK-13 indirectly attacked H. akashiwo by alga-lytic substances that might be located at the compartment of cytoplasmic membrane of the bacterium at a level of 45.86 units/mg of specific activity. The results indicated that P. fluorescens HAK-13 caused cell lysis and death of H. akashiwo, A. tamarense, and C. polykrikoides dramatically and Prorocentrum dentatum slightly. Therefore, P. fluorescens HAK-13 has potential for use as a selective biocontrol of harmful algal blooms.  相似文献   

11.
The Delaware Inland Bays (DIB) have experienced harmful algal blooms of dinoflagellates and raphidophytes in recent years. We used quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) techniques to investigate the community dynamics of three DIB dinoflagellates (Karlodinium veneficum, Gyrodinium instriatum, and Prorocentrum minimum) and one raphidophyte (Heterosigma akashiwo) at a single site in the DIB (IR-32) in summer 2006 relative to salinity, temperature and nutrient concentrations. We also carried out complementary laboratory culture studies. New primers and probes were developed and validated for the 18S rRNA genes in the three dinoflagellates. K. veneficum, H. akashiwo, and G. instriatum were present in almost all samples throughout the summer of 2006. In contrast, P. minimum was undetectable in late June through September, when temperatures ranged from 20 to 30 °C (average 25.7 °C). Dissolved nutrients ranged from 0.1 to 2.8 μM PO43− (median = 0.3 μM), 0.7–30.2 μM NOx (median = 12.9 μM), and 0–19.4 μM NH4+ (median = 0.7 μM). Dissolved N:P ratios covered a wide range from 2.6 to 177, with a median of 40. There was considerable variability in occurrence of the four species versus nutrients, but in general P. minimum and H. akashiwo were most abundant at higher (>40) N:P ratios and dissolved nitrogen concentrations, while K. veneficum and G. instriatum were most abundant at low dissolved N:P ratios (<20) and dissolved nitrogen concentrations < 10 μM. The semi-continuous laboratory competition experiment used mixed cultures of K. veneficum, P. minimum, and H. akashiwo grown at dissolved N:P ratios of 5, 16, and 25. At an N:P of 16 and 25 P. minimum was the dominant alga at the end of the experiment, even at a temperature that was much higher than that at which this alga was found to bloom in the field (27 °C). P. minimum and H. akashiwo had highest densities in the N:P of 25. K. veneficum grew equally well at all three N:P ratios, and was co-dominant at times at an N:P of 5. H. akashiwo had the lowest densities of the three algae in the laboratory experiment. Laboratory and field results showed both interesting similarities and significant differences in the influences of important environmental factors on competition between these harmful algal species, suggesting the need for more work to fully understand HAB dynamics in the DIB.  相似文献   

12.
《Harmful algae》2008,7(1):1-10
On 29 April 2003, a Heterosigma akashiwo bloom (9.5 × 104 cells mL−1) associated with a fish kill (>104 dead fishes estimated from aerial surveys) was observed offshore of Bulls Bay, McLellanville, South Carolina, USA. To assess a potential cause of this bloom event, we investigated the bacterial diversity and algal/bacterial interactions in the bloom microbial community. Thirty-five bacterial strains were isolated and screened for algicidal or algal growth-promoting activities. One strain (BBB25) had significant growth-promoting effects on all 7 algal species tested: three raphidophytes (Heterosigma akashiwo, Chattonella subsalsa, Fibrocapsa japonica), two diatoms (Chaetoceros neogracile, Nitzschia sp.), a cryptophyte (Cryptomonas sp.), and a chlorophyte, Ankistrodesmus sp. This strain (BBB25) is a Gram-positive, rod-shaped spore-forming bacterium. Partial 16S rDNA gene sequence and morphological characters indicated that BBB25 is related closely to the genus Bacillus. The general nature of the algal response indicates that the growth-promoting effects of BBB25 are not specific to H. akashiwo, and suggests potentially widespread effects. Since the presence or relative abundance of the other algal species was not assessed during the bloom initiation period, the selective stimulatory effect on H. akashiwo bloom formation in Bulls Bay is unknown. These results demonstrate, however, the potential for bacterial species to play a regulatory role in bloom formation.  相似文献   

13.
Toxic algal blooms are common world-wide and pose a serious problem to the aquaculture and fishing industries. Dinoflagellate species such as Karenia brevis, Karenia mikimotoi, Heterosigma akashiwo and Chatonella cf. antiqua are recognised toxic species implicated in various faunal mortalities. Toxic blooms of Karenia cristata were observed on the south coast of South Africa for the first time in 1988 and were responsible for mortalities of wild and farmed abalone. K. cristata and various other dinoflagellate species common along the South African coast, as well as K. mikimotoi (Isolation site: Norway, Univ. of Copenhagen) and K. brevis (Isolation site: Florida, BIGELOW), were tested for toxicity by means of a bioassay involving Artemia larvae as well as abalone larvae and spat. K. cristata, like K. brevis, contains an aerosol toxin; however, the toxin present in K. cristata has not yet been isolated and remains unknown. K. brevis was, therefore, used to determine which developmental phase of the bloom would affect abalone farms most, and whether ozone could be used as an effective mitigating agent. Of the 17 dinoflagellate species tested, K. cristata, Akashiwo sanguinea, K. mikimotoi and K. brevis pose the greatest threat to the abalone mariculture industry. K. brevis was most toxic during its exponential and stationary phases. Results suggest that ozone is an effective mitigation agent but its economic viability for use on abalone farms must still be investigated.  相似文献   

14.
The population dynamics of Cytophaga strain 41-DBG2, a bacterium algicidal to the harmful algal bloom (HAB) dinoflagellate Karenia brevis, were investigated in laboratory experiments using fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH) and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). Following its introduction into non-axenic K. brevis cultures at concentrations of 103 or 105 bacterial cells per milliliter, 41-DBG2 increased to 106 cells per milliliter before initiation of its algicidal activity. Such threshold concentrations were not achieved when starting algal cell numbers were relatively low (103 cells per milliliter), suggesting that the growth of this bacterium may require high levels of dissolved organic matter (DOM) excreted by the algae. It remains to be determined whether this threshold concentration is required to trigger an algicidal response by 41-DBG2 or, alternatively, is the point at which the bacterium accumulates to an effective killing concentration. The ambient microbial community associated with these algal cultures, as determined by DGGE profiles, did not change until after K. brevis cells were in the process of lysing, indicating a response to the rapid input of algal-derived organic matter. Resistance to algicidal attack exhibited by several K. brevis clones was found to result from the inhibition of 41-DBG2 growth in the presence of currently unculturable bacteria associated with those clones. These bacteria apparently prevented 41-DBG2 from reaching the threshold concentration required for initiation of algicidal activity. Remarkably, resistance and susceptibility to the algicidal activity of 41-DBG2 could be transferred between K. brevis clones with the exchange of their respective unattached bacterial communities, which included several dominant phylotypes belonging to the α-proteobacteria, γ-proteobacteria, and Cytophaga–Flavobacterium–Bacteroides (CFB) groups. We hypothesize that CFB bacteria may be successfully competing with 41-DBG2 (also a member of the CFB) for nutrients, thereby inhibiting growth of the latter and indirectly providing resistance against algicidal attack. We conclude that if algicidal bacteria play a significant role in regulating HAB dynamics, as some authors have inferred, bacterial community interactions are crucial factors that must be taken into consideration in future studies.  相似文献   

15.
The algicidal activity of the rhamnolipid biosurfactants (the mixture of Rha-Rha-C10-C10 and Rha-C10-C10) produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa was investigated in the present paper. The results indicated that the biosurfactants had potential algicidal effects on the harmful algal bloom (HAB) species, Heterosigma akashiwo. The growth of H. akashiwo was strongly inhibited in medium containing rhamnolipids (0.4–3.0 mg L−1); moreover, the rhamnolipids showed strong lytic activity toward H. akashiwo at higher concentrations (≥4.0 mg L−1). In addition, the effects of the rhamnolipids on the growth of Gymnodinium sp. and Prorocentrum dentatum, another two kinds of HAB species, were also studied. Compared with the dramatic algicidal effect on H. akashiwo, the cells of P. dentatum were inhibited or lysed at higher concentrations (1.0–10.0 mg L−1), while the cells of Gymnodinium sp. were not suppressed with the same treatment, indicating the rhamnolipids had the potential for the selective control of HABs.Morphometric analysis at ultrastructural level by transmission electron micrographs indicated that the extent of ultrastructural damage of the alga was severe at high concentrations of rhamnolipids and during extended periods of contact. The first response occurred in the plasma membrane which partly disintegrated. The lack of membrane facilitated the rhamnolipid biosurfactants into the cells and allowed damage to other organelles, which resulted in the injury of chloroplast, vacuolization of mitochondria and deformation of the cristae, disruption of nuclear membrane and condensation of chromatin in nucleus, suggesting that the lytic activity of rhamnolipids was mainly due to their powerful surfactivity and their tendency to cohere on the surface of phospholipids bimolecular layer of the cells and further destroyed the layers, and then the structure of quasi-membrane configurations inside the cells was disintegrated, following by the irreversible damage to the ultrastructure and the loss of the function of organelles, consequently leading the cells to lyse.  相似文献   

16.
Five strains (HYY0510-SK04, HYY0511-SK09, HYK0512-SK12, HYK0512-PK04 and HYY0512-PK05) of algicidal bacteria against the harmful bloom forming diatom Stephanodiscus hantzschii and dinoflagellate Peridinium bipes, were isolated. Among these strains, HYY0510-SK04, HYY0511-SK09 and HYK0512-SK12 have an effective algicidal activity for S. hantzschii, while HYK0512-PK04 and HYY0512-PK05 have an algicidal effect against P. bipes. Sequence analysis of 16S rDNA showed that HYY0510-SK04 and HYY0511-SK09 were closely related to Acidovorax delafieldii ATCC 17505T. HYK0512-SK12, HYK0512-PK04 and HYY0512-PK05 showed high homology with Variovorax paradoxus IAM 12373T (98.9%), Hydrogenophaga palleronii ATCC 49743T (98.8%) and Pseudomonas plecoglossicida ATCC 700383T (98.3%), respectively. HYY0510-SK04, HYY0511-SK09 and HYK0512-SK12 degraded S. hantzschii cells within two weeks when those bacteria were inoculated at densities of ≥107cells mL−1 to the lag or logarithmic growth phase of the algal culture. HYK0512-PK04 and HYY0512-PK05 degraded more than 90% of P. bipes cells within 14 and 8 days, respectively, when these bacteria were inoculated at densities of ≥107cells mL−1. Among the five bacterial strains, HYK0512-SK12 and HYY0512-PK05 showed the most effective growth inhibition of all the algae and cyanobacteria tested. Biochemical assays revealed that the main algicidal substance from all isolates were likely to be extracellular substances. These results indicate that the bacterial strains isolated for this study are potential agents for the control of harmful algal blooms in eutrophic reservoirs.  相似文献   

17.
Species within the class Raphidophyceae were associated with fish kill events in Japanese, European, Canadian, and U.S. coastal waters. Fish mortality was attributable to gill damage with exposure to reactive oxygen species (peroxide, superoxide, and hydroxide radicals), neurotoxins, physical clogging, and hemolytic substances. Morphological identification of these organisms in environmental water samples is difficult, particularly when fixatives are used. Because of this difficulty and the continued global emergence of these species in coastal estuarine waters, we initiated the development and validation of a suite of real‐time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays. Sequencing was used to generate complete data sets for nuclear encoded small‐subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA; 18S); internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2, 5.8S; and plastid encoded SSU rRNA (16S) for confirmed raphidophyte cultures from various geographic locations. Sequences for several Chattonella species (C. antiqua, C. marina, C. ovata, C. subsalsa, and C. verruculosa), Heterosigma akashiwo, and Fibrocapsa japonica were generated and used to design rapid and specific PCR assays for several species including C. verruculosa Hara et Chihara, C. subsalsa Biecheler, the complex comprised of C. marina Hara et Chihara, C. antiqua Ono and C. ovata, H. akashiwo Ono, and F. japonica Toriumi et Takano using appropriate loci. With this comprehensive data set, we were also able to perform phylogenetic analyses to determine the relationship between these species.  相似文献   

18.
Isolation of algicidal compounds from Ulva fasciata revealed that the algicidal substances were the polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) as hexadeca-4,7,10,13-tetraenoic acid (HDTA) C16:4 n-3, octadeca-6,9,12,15-tetraenoic acid (ODTA) C18:4 n-3, α-linolenic acid (ALA) C18:3 n-3 and linoleic acid (LA) C18:2 n-6. The fatty acid composition of four species of Ulvaceae (U. fasciata, U. pertusa, U. arasakii and U. conglobota) was analyzed by capillary gas chromatography to investigate the relationship with the algicidal activity. The results indicate that highly algicidal species, U. fasciata and U. pertusa, showed higher contents of C16:4 n-3, C18:3 n-3, and C18:4 n-3. Concentrations of these PUFAs released from the seaweed in the culture medium were also analyzed. These PUFAs were found to be significantly active against Chattonella antiqua, C. marina, Fibrocapsa japonica, Heterosigma akashiwo, Karenia mikimotoi, moderately effective against Heterocapsa circularisquama, Prorocentrum minimum, P. sigmoides, Scrippsiella trochoidea, whereas low effective against Alexandrium catenella and Cochlodinium polykrikoides. It is suggested that the PUFAs are useful mitigation agents to remove several harmful effects without causing detrimental effects on surrounding marine living organisms.  相似文献   

19.
Delaware's Inland Bays (DIB), USA, are subject to blooms of potentially harmful raphidophytes, including Heterosigma akashiwo. In 2004, a dense bloom was observed in a low salinity tributary of the DIB. Light microscopy initially suggested that the species was H. akashiwo; however, the cells were smaller than anticipated. 18S rDNA sequences of isolated cultures differed substantially from all raphidophyte sequences in GenBank. Phylogenetic analysis placed it approximately equidistant from Chattonella and Heterosigma with only ~96% sequence homology with either group. Here, we describe this marine raphidophyte as a novel genus and species, Viridilobus marinus (gen. et sp. nov.). We also compared this species with H. akashiwo, because both species are superficially similar with respect to morphology and their ecological niches overlap. V. marinus cells are ovoid to spherical (11.4 × 9.4 μm), and the average number of chloroplasts (4 per cell) is lower than in H. akashiwo (15 per cell). Pigment analysis of V. marinus revealed the presence of fucoxanthin, violaxanthin, and zeaxanthin, which are characteristic of marine raphidophytes within the family Chattonellaceae of the Raphidophyceae. TEM and confocal microscopy, however, revealed diagnostic microscopic and ultrastructural characteristics that distinguish it from other raphidophytes. Chloroplasts were in close association with the nucleus and thylakoids were arranged either parallel or perpendicular to the cell surface. Putative mucocysts were identified, but trichocysts were not observed. These features, along with DNA sequence data, distinguish this species from all other raphidophyte genera within the family Chattonellaceae of the Raphidophyceae.  相似文献   

20.
A bacterial strain named AB-4 showing algicidal activity against Chattonella marina was isolated from coastal water of ULjin, Republic of Korea. The isolated strain was identified as Bacillus sp. by culture morphology, biochemical reactions, and homology research based on 16S rDNA. The bacterial culture led to the lysis of algal cells, suggesting that the isolated strain produced a latent algal-lytic compound. Amongst changes in algicidal activity by different culture filtrate volumes, the 10% (100 μl/ml) concentration showed the biggest change in algicidal activity; there, estimated algicidal activity was 95%. The swimming movements of Chattonella marina cells were inhibited because of treatment of the bacterial culture; subsequently, Chattonella marina cells became swollen and rounded. With longer exposure time, algal cells were disrupted and cellular components lost their integrity and decomposed. The released algicide(s) were heat-tolerant and stable in pH variations, except pH 3, 4, and 5. Culture filtrate of Bacillus sp. AB-4 was toxic against harmful algae bloom (HAB) species and nontoxic against livefood organisms. Bacillus sp. AB-4 showed comparatively strong activity against Akashiwo sanguinea, Fibriocapsa japonica, Heterosigma akashiwo, and Scrippsiella trochoidea. These results suggest that the algicidal activity of Bacillus sp. AB-4 is potentially useful for controlling outbreaks of Chattonella marina.  相似文献   

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