Abstract: | A dinoflagellate bloom was found associated with a fish kill event in a South Carolina brackish water retention pond. A multi-analytical approach was used to confirm the identity of the bloom dinoflagellate and evaluate its potential toxicity. Karlodinium micrum was confirmed through light microscopy, pigment profile comparisons, species-specific PCR, and gene sequence data. Necropsy findings on several fish were suggestive of an acute kill event. Toxicity of filtrate from bloom samples was tested by a hemolytic assay using rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykis) erythrocytes and an ichthyotoxicity assay using larval zebrafish (Danio rerio). Hemolytic activity was measurably high (>80% hemolysis) in both whole filtrate and fractionated filtrate (from the 80% MeOH C18 column elution). This fraction also demonstrated high ichthyotoxic activity as exposed fish experienced rapid death. These results implicate toxic K. micrum as a causative factor in fish death in a non-aquaculture brackish pond associated with a housing development, and extend recent findings linking this species to fish kills in aquaculture ponds. |