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Molecular approaches to diagnosing nutritional physiology in harmful algae: Implications for studying the effects of eutrophication
Institution:1. Baltic Nest Institute, Baltic Sea Centre, Stockholm University, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Applied Environmental Science, Stockholm University, 11418 Stockholm, Sweden;1. Central Laboratory of Fujian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Fujian 350003, China;2. State Key Laboratory Breeding Base of Marine Genetic Resource, Third Institute of Oceanography, SOA, Xiamen 361005, China;3. Collaborative Innovation Center of Deep Sea Biology, Hangzhou 310058, China;4. Inspection & Quarantine Technology Center, Xiamen Entry–exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau (IQTC), Xiamen 361100, China;1. Université Libre de Bruxelles, Laboratoire d''Ecologie des Systèmes Aquatiques, CP-221, Bd du Triomphe B-1050, Belgium;2. Université de Liège, Unité d''Océanographie Chimique, Institut de Physique (B5), B-4000, Belgium
Abstract:Every year harmful algal blooms (HABs) cause serious impacts to local economies, coastal ecosystems, and human health on a global scale. It is well known that nutrient availability can influence important aspects of harmful algae biology and ecology, such as growth, toxin production, and life cycle stage, as well as bloom initiation, persistence and decline. Increases in the rate of supply of organic matter to ecosystems (eutrophication) carries many possible ramifications to coastal systems, including the potential for nutrient enrichment and the potential for stimulation of harmful algal blooms. Traditional studies on algal nutrition typically use either cultured isolates or community level assays, to examine nutrient uptake, nutrient preference, elemental composition, and other metrics of a species’ response to nutrients. In the last decade, technological advances have led to a great increase in the number of sequences available for critical harmful species. This, in turn, has led to new insights with regards to algal nutrition, and these advances highlight the promise of molecular technologies, and genomic approaches, to improving our understanding of algal nutrient acquisition and nutritional physiological ecology, in both cultures and field populations. With these developments increased monitoring of nutritional physiology in field populations of harmful algae will allow us to better discriminate how eutrophication impacts these groups.
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