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1.
The red tide dinoflagellate Karenia brevis (Davis) G. Hansen and Moestrup is noted for causing mass mortalities of marine organisms in the Gulf of Mexico. Most research has focused on culture isolates from the eastern Gulf of Mexico. In this investigation, we examine the effects of light, temperature and salinity on the growth rate of K. brevis from the western Gulf of Mexico. Growth rates of K. brevis were determined under various combinations of irradiance (19, 31, 52, 67, and 123 μmol m−2 s−1), salinity (25, 30, 35, 40 and 45), and temperature (15, 20, 25, and 30 °C). Maximum growth rates varied from 0.17 to 0.36 div day−1 with exponential growth rates increasing with increasing irradiance. Little or no growth was supported at 19 μmol photons m−2 s−1 for any experiment. Maximum growth rates at 15 °C were much lower than at other temperatures. Maximum growth rates of the Texas clone (SP3) fell within the range of Florida clones reported in the literature (0.17–0.36 div day−1 versus 0.2–1.0 div day−1). The Texas clone SP3 had a very similar light saturation point compared to that of a Florida isolate (Wilson's clone) (67 μmol m−2 s−1 versus 65 μmol m−2 s−1), and light compensation (20–30 μmol m−2 s−11). The upper and lower salinity tolerance of the Texas clone was similar than that of some Florida clones (45 versus 46 and 25 versus 22.5, respectively). In our study, the Texas clone had the same temperature tolerance reported for Florida clones (15–30 °C). While individual clones can vary considerably in maximum growth rates, our results indicate only minor differences exist between the Texas and Florida strains of K. brevis in their temperature and salinity tolerance for growth. While the literature notes lower salinity occurrences of K. brevis in nearby Louisiana, our isolate from the southern Texas coast has the higher salinity requirements typical of K. brevis in the eastern Gulf of Mexico.  相似文献   

2.
Large blooms of the marine cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula in Moreton Bay, Australia (27°05′S, 153°08′E) have been re-occurring for several years. A bloom was studied in Deception Bay (Northern Moreton Bay) in detail over the period January–March 2000. In situ data loggers and field sampling characterised various environmental parameters before and during the L. majuscula bloom. Various ecophysiological experiments were conducted on L. majuscula collected in the field and transported to the laboratory, including short-term (2 h) 14C incorporation rates and long-term (7 days) pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) fluorometry assessments of photosynthetic capacity. The effects of L. majuscula on various seagrasses in the bloom region were also assessed with repeated biomass sampling. The bloom commenced in January 2000 following usual December rainfall events, water temperatures in excess of 24 °C and high light conditions. This bloom expanded rapidly from 0 to a maximum extent of 8 km2 over 55 days with an average biomass of 210 gdw−1 m−2 in late February, followed by a rapid decline in early April. Seagrass biomass, especially Syringodium isoetifolium, was found to decline in areas of dense L. majuscula accumulation. Dissolved and total nutrient concentrations did not differ significantly (P > 0.05) preceding or during the bloom. However, water samples from creeks discharging into the study region indicated elevated concentrations of total iron (2.7–80.6 μM) and dissolved organic carbon (2.5–24.7 mg L−1), associated with low pH values (3.8–6.7). 14C incorporation rates by L. majuscula were significantly (P < 0.05) elevated by additions of iron (5 μM Fe), an organic chelator, ethylenediaminetetra-acetic acid (5 μM EDTA) and phosphorus (5 μM PO4−3). Photosynthetic capacity measured with PAM fluorometry was also stimulated by various nutrient additions, but not significantly (P > 0.05). These results suggest that the L. majuscula bloom may have been stimulated by bioavailable iron, perhaps complexed by dissolved organic carbon. The rapid bloom expansion observed may then have been sustained by additional inputs of nutrients (N and P) and iron through sediment efflux, stimulated by redox changes due to decomposing L. majuscula mats.  相似文献   

3.
The spatial-temporal distribution of a dinoflagellate bloom dominated or co-dominated by Prorocentrum minimum was examined during autumn through early spring in a warm temperate, eutrophic estuary. The developing bloom was first detected from a web-based alert provided by a network of real-time remote monitoring (RTRM) platforms indicating elevated dissolved oxygen and pH levels in upper reaches of the estuary. RTRM data were used to augment shipboard sampling, allowing for an in-depth characterization of bloom initiation, development, movement, and dissipation. Prolonged drought conditions leading to elevated salinities, and relatively high nutrient concentrations from upstream inputs and other sources, likely pre-disposed the upper estuary for bloom development. Over a 7-month period (October 2001–April 2002), the bloom moved toward the northern shore of the mesohaline estuary, intensified under favorable conditions, and finally dissipated after a major storm. Bloom location and transport were influenced by prevailing wind structure and periods of elevated rainfall. Chlorophyll a within bloom areas averaged 106 ± 13 μg L−1 (mean ± 1 S.E.; maximum, 803 μg L−1), in comparison to 20 ± 1 μg L−1 outside the bloom. There were significant positive relationships between dinoflagellate abundance and TN and TP. Ammonium, NO3, and SRP concentrations did not decrease within the main bloom, suggesting that upstream inputs and other sources provided nutrient-replete conditions. In addition, PAM fluorometric measurements (09:00–13:00 h) of maximal PSII quantum yield (Fv/Fm) were consistently 0.6–0.8 within the bloom until late March, providing little evidence of photo-physiological stress as would have been expected under nutrient-limiting conditions. Nitrogen uptake kinetics were estimated for P. minimum during the period when that species was dominant (October–December 2001), based on literature values for N uptake by an earlier P. minimum bloom (winter 1999) in the Neuse Estuary. The analysis suggests that NH4+ was the major N species that supported the bloom. Considering the chlorophyll a concentrations during October and December and the estimated N uptake rates, phytoplankton biomass was estimated to have doubled once per day. Bloom displacement (January–February) coincided with higher diversity of heterotrophic dinoflagellate species as P. minimum abundance decreased. This research shows the value of RTRM in bloom detection and tracking, and advances understanding of dinoflagellate bloom dynamics in eutrophic estuaries.  相似文献   

4.
Light and nutrient availability change throughout dinoflagellate diel vertical migration (DVM) and/or with sub-population location in the water column along the west Florida shelf. Typically, the vertical depth of the shelf is greater than the distance a sub-population can vertically migrate during a diel cycle, limiting the ability of a sub-population to photosynthetically fix carbon toward the surface and access nutrients sub-surface. This project investigated changes of Karenia brevis (C.C. Davis) G. Hansen et Moestrup intracellular carbon, nitrogen, internal nitrate (iNO3), free amino acid (FAA), and total lipid concentrations in high-light, nitrate-replete (960 μmol quanta m−2 s−1, 80 μM NO3), and high-light, nitrate-reduced (960 μmol quanta m−2 s−1, <5 μM NO3) mesocosms. The nitrate-reduced mesocosm had a slowed cell division rate when compared to the nitrate-replete mesocosm. Minimum intracellular carbon, nitrogen, iNO3, FAA, and total lipid concentrations during the largest surface sub-population aggregations led to the conclusion that daughter cells resulting from cell division received unequal shares of the parental resources and that this inequality influenced migration behavior. Nutrient reduced daughter cells were more strongly influenced by light and phototaxis for carbon production than their replete same cell division sister cells during vertical migration thus rapidly increasing the fulfillment of constituents through photosynthesis. Vertical migration was consistent with an optimization scheme based on threshold limits through utilization or formation of photosynthate. We propose a simplified conceptual model describing how K. brevis is transported along the benthos of the west Florida shelf from off-shore to on-shore. Dynamic carbon thresholds are also suggested for future DVM modeling efforts on K. brevis populations transported between nitrogen replete and nitrogen reduced environmental conditions.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
Seasonal changes of field populations and growth rates of two dinoflagellates, Ceratium furca and Ceratium fusus, were examined in the temperate coastal water of Sagami Bay, Japan. Weekly field sampling was conducted from August 2002 to August 2003, and laboratory experiments were also carried out to investigate effects of temperature, irradiance and photoperiod on the growth rates of these two Ceratium species. In the field, the abundances of both species increased significantly from April to August 2003, were gradually decreased from November 2002 and were not observed in January 2003. C. fusus was able to increase at lower temperatures in February 2003 compared to C. furca. In the laboratory, the two species did not grow at <10 °C or >32 °C. The highest specific growth rate of C. furca was 0.72 d−1 at 24 °C and 600 μmol m−2 s−1. Optimum growth rates (>0.4 d−1) of C. furca were observed at temperatures from 18 to 28 °C and at irradiances from 216 to 796 μmol m−2 s−1. The highest growth rate of C. fusus was 0.56 d−1 at 26 °C and 216 μmol m−2 s−1. Optimum growth rates of C. fusus were observed at the same irradiance rage of C. furca, whereas optimum temperature range was narrower (26–28 °C). The growth curves of both species indicated saturation of the growth rates when light intensity was above 216 μmol m−2 s−1, and did not show photoinhibition at irradiances up to 796 μmol m−2 s−1. The specific growth rates of both Ceratium species were clearly decreased at L:D = 10:14 relative to those at L:D = 14:10 and L:D = 12:12. The present study indicates the two Ceratium species can adapt to a wide range of temperature and irradiance.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
Renoguanylin (REN) is a recently described member of the guanylin family, which was first isolated from eels and is expressed in intestinal and specially kidney tissues. In the present work we evaluate the effects of REN on the mechanisms of hydrogen transport in rat renal tubules by the stationary microperfusion method. We evaluated the effect of 1 μM and 10 μM of renoguanylin (REN) on the reabsorption of bicarbonate in proximal and distal segments and found that there was a significant reduction in bicarbonate reabsorption. In proximal segments, REN promoted a significant effect at both 1 and 10 μM concentrations. Comparing control and REN concentration of 1 μM, JHCO3, nmol cm− 2 s− 1 − 1,76 ± 0,11control × 1,29 ± 0,08REN 10 μM; P < 0.05, was obtained. In distal segments the effect of both concentrations of REN was also effective, being significant e.g. at a concentration of 1 μM (JHCO3, nmol cm− 2 s− 1 − 0.80 ± 0.07control × 0.60 ± 0.06REN 1 μM; P < 0.05), although at a lower level than in the proximal tubule. Our results suggest that the action of REN on hydrogen transport involves the inhibition of Na+/H+exchanger and H+-ATPase in the luminal membrane of the perfused tubules by a PKG dependent pathway.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the seasonal variation on aerobic metabolism and the response of oxidative stress parameters in the digestive glands of the subpolar limpet Nacella (P.) magellanica. Sampling was carried out from July (winter) 2002 to July 2003 in Beagle Channel, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. Whole animal respiration rates increased in early spring as the animals spawned and remained elevated throughout summer and fall (winter: 0.09 ± 0.02 μmol O2 h− 1 g− 1; summer: 0.31 ± 0.06 μmol O2 h− 1 g− 1). Oxidative stress was assessed at the hydrophilic level as the ascorbyl radical content / ascorbate content ratio (A / AH). The A / AH ratio showed minimum values in winter (3.7 ± 0.2 10− 5 AU) and increased in summer (18 ± 5 10− 5 AU). A similar pattern was observed for lipid radical content (122 ± 29 pmol mg− 1 fresh mass [FW] in winter and 314 ± 45 pmol mg− 1 FW in summer), iron content (0.99 ± 0.07 and 2.7 ± 0.6 nmol mg− 1 FW in winter and summer, respectively) and catalase activity (2.9 ± 0.2 and 7 ± 1 U mg− 1 FW in winter and summer, respectively). Since nitrogen derived radicals are thought to be critically involved in oxidative metabolism in cells, nitric oxide content was measured and a significant difference in the content of the Fe–MGD–NO adduct in digestive glands from winter and summer animals was observed. Together, the data indicate that both oxygen and nitrogen radical generation rates in N. (P.) magellanica are strongly dependent on season.  相似文献   

12.
The regulatory role of viruses on population dynamics of the prymnesiophyte Phaeocystis globosa was studied during a mesocosm experiment in relation to growth and loss by microzooplankton grazing and cell lysis. The mesocosms were conducted under varying light conditions (20 and 150 μmol photons m−2 s−1) and nutrient regime (inorganic nitrogen to phosphorus ratios of 4, 16 and 44). Overall, viruses infecting P. globosa (PgV) were found to be an important cause of cell lysis (30–100% of total lysis) and a significant loss factor (7–67% of total loss). We demonstrate that the morphology of P. globosa cells (solitary versus colonial) differently regulated viral control of P. globosa bloom formation. Reduced irradiance (20 μmol photons m−2 s−1) was provided for 11 days to select for the solitary cell morphotype. Viruses were able to restrict P. globosa bloom formation even after irradiance became saturating again (150 μmol photons m−2 s−1). Saturating light conditions from the start of the experiment allowed colony formation and because the colony-morphotype acted as a mechanism reducing viral infection bloom formation succeeded. Nutrient depletion, however, affected specifically the colonies that disintegrated while releasing single cells. Virus infection of these solitary cells resulted in the termination of the bloom. The nature of phytoplankton growth-limiting nutrient (nitrate and/or orthophosphate) did not seem to noticeably affect the level of viral control.  相似文献   

13.
Field and laboratory experiments were designed to determine the differential growth and toxin response to inorganic and organic nitrogen additions in Pseudo-nitzschia spp. Nitrogen enrichments of 50 μM nitrate (KNO3), 10 μM ammonium (NH4Cl), 20 μM urea and a control (no addition) were carried out in separate carboys with seawater collected from the mouth of the San Francisco Bay (Bolinas Bay), an area characterized by high concentrations of macronutrients and iron. All treatments showed significant increases in biomass, with chlorophyll a peaking on days 4–5 for all treatments except urea, which maintained exponential growth through the termination of the experiment. Pseudo-nitzschia australis Frenguelli abundance was 103 cells l−1 at the start of the experiment and increased by an order of magnitude by day 2. Particulate domoic acid (pDA) was initially low but detectable (0.15 μg l−1), and increased throughout exponential and stationary phases across all treatments. At the termination of the experiment, the urea treatment produced more than double the amount of pDA (9.39 μg l−1) than that produced by the nitrate treatment (4.26 μg l−1) and triple that of the control and ammonium treatments (1.36 μg l−1 and 2.64 μg l−1, respectively). The mean specific growth rates, calculated from increases in chlorophyll a and from cellular abundance of P. australis, were statistically similar across all treatments.These field results confirmed laboratory experiments conducted with a P. australis strain isolated from Monterey Bay, CA (isolate AU221-a) grown in artificial seawater enriched with 50 μM nitrate, 50 μM ammonium or 25 μM of urea as the sole nitrogen source. The exponential growth rate of P. australis was significantly slower for cells grown on urea (ca. 0.5 day−1) compared to the cells grown on either nitrate or ammonium (ca. 0.9 day−1). However the urea-grown cells produced more particulate and dissolved domoic acid (DA) than the ammonium- or nitrate-grown cells. The field and laboratory experiments demonstrate that P. australis is able to grow effectively on urea as the primary source of nitrogen and produced more pDA when grown on urea in both natural assemblages and unialgal cultures. These results suggest that the influence of urea from coastal runoff may prove to be more important in the development or maintenance of toxic blooms than previously thought, and that the source of nitrogen may be a determining factor in the relative toxicity of west coast blooms of P. australis.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) occur worldwide causing serious threat to marine life, and to public health through seafood-borne illnesses and exposure to toxin-containing marine aerosol. This study was undertaken to assess the ability of phosphatic clay to remove the toxic dinoflagellate, Karenia brevis, and the potent neurotoxins (brevetoxins) produced by this species. Results showed that the addition of an aqueous slurry of 0.75 g (dry weight) clay to 3 l of K. brevis culture, containing 5×106 and 10×106 cells/l, removed 97±4% of brevetoxins from the water column within 4 h after the addition of clay. Clay flocculation of extra-cellular brevetoxins, released from cells ruptured (lyzed) by ultrasonication, removed 70±10% of the toxins. Addition of the chemical flocculant, polyaluminum chloride (PAC), removed all of the extra-cellular toxins. A 14 day study was undertaken to observe the fate of brevetoxins associated with clay flocculation of viable K. brevis cells. At 24 h following the clay addition, 90±18% of the toxins were removed from the water column, along with 85±4% of the cells. The toxin content of clay diminished from 208±13 μg at Day 1, to 121±21 μg at Day 14, indicating that the phosphatic clay retained about 58% of the toxins throughout the 14-day period. These studies showed the utility of natural clay as a means of reducing adverse effects from HABs, including removal of dissolved toxins, in the water column, although considerable work clearly remains before this approach can be used on natural blooms in open waters.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
In this study we investigated the ability of Chara intermedia to acclimate to different irradiances (i.e. “low-light” (LL): 20–30 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and “high-light” (HL): 180–200 μmol photons m−2 s−1) and light qualities (white, yellow and green), using morphological, photosynthesis, chlorophyll fluorescence and pigment analysis.Relative growth rates increased with increasing irradiance from 0.016 ± 0.003 (LL) to 0.024 ± 0.005 (HL) g g−1 d−1 fresh weight and were independent of light quality. A growth-based branch orientation towards high-light functioning as a mechanism to protect the plant from excessive light was confirmed. It was shown that the receptor responsible for the morphological reaction is sensitive to blue-light.C. intermedia showed higher oxygen evolution (up to 10.5 (HL) vs. 4.5 (LL) nmol O2 mg Chl−1 s−1), photochemical and energy-dependent Chl fluorescence quenching and a lower Fv/Fm after acclimation to HL. With respect to qP, the acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus depended on light quality and needed the blue part of the spectrum for full development. In addition, pigment composition was influenced by light and the Chl a/Car and Antheraxanthin (A) + Zeaxanthin (Z)/Violaxanthin (V) + A + Z (DES) ratios revealed the expected acclimation behaviour in favour of carotenoid protection under HL (i.e. decrease of Chl a/Car from 3.41 ± 0.48 to 2.30 ± 0.35 and increase of DES from 0.39 ± 0.05 to 0.87 ± 0.03), while the Chl a/Chl b ratios were not significantly affected. Furthermore it was shown that morphological light acclimation mechanisms influence the extent of the physiological modifications.  相似文献   

18.
Observations of near-bottom populations of Karenia brevis suggest that these cells may derive nutrients from the sediment–water interface. Cells undergoing a metabolic-mediated migration may be in close proximity to enhanced concentrations of nutrients associated with the sediment during at least a fraction of their diel cycle. In this study, the growth, uptake and assimilation rates of ammonium, nitrate, and urea by K. brevis were examined on a diel basis to better understand the potential role of these nutrients in the near-bottom ecology of this species. Three strains of K. brevis, C6, C3, and CCMP 2229, were grown under 12:12 light dark cycle under 30 μmol photons m−2 s−1 delivered to the surface plain of batch cultures. Nitrogen uptake was evaluated using 15N tracer techniques and trichloroacetic acid extraction was used to evaluate the quantity of nitrogen (N) assimilated into cell protein. Growth rates ranged from a low of 0.12 divisions day−1 for C6 and C3 grown on nitrate to a high of 0.18 divisions day−1 for C3 grown on urea. Diurnal maximum uptake rates, ρmax, varied from 0.41 pmol-N cell−1 h−1 for CCMP 2229 grown on nitrate, to 1.29 pmol-N cell−1 h−1 for CCMP 2229 grown on urea. Average nocturnal uptake rates were 29% of diurnal rates for nitrate, 103% of diurnal uptake rates for ammonium and 56% of diurnal uptake rates for urea. Uptake kinetic parameters varied between substrates, between strains and between day and night measurements. Highest maximum uptake rates were found for urea for strains CCMP2229 and C3 and for ammonium for strain C6. Rates of asmilation into protein also varied day and night, but overall were highest for urea. The comparison of maximal uptake rates as well as assimilation efficiencies indicate that ammonium and urea are utilized (taken up and assimilated) more than twice was fast as nitrate on a diel basis.  相似文献   

19.
This study assessed the effect of two precursors (l-phenylalanine and p-amino benzoic acid) used alone or in combination with methyl jasmonate, on the growth and accumulation of paclitaxel, baccatin III and 10-deacetylbaccatin III in hairy root cultures of Taxus x media var. Hicksii. The greatest increase in dry biomass was observed after 4 weeks of culturing hairy roots in medium supplemented with 1 μM of l-phenylalanine (6.2 g L−1). Addition of 1 μM of l-phenylalanine to the medium also resulted in the greatest 10-deacetylbaccatin III accumulation (422.7 μg L−1), which was not detected in the untreated control culture. Supplementation with 100 μM of l-phenylalanine together with 100 μM of methyl jasmonate resulted in the enhancement of paclitaxel production from 40.3 μg L−1 (control untreated culture) to 568.2 μg L−1, the highest paclitaxel content detected in the study. The effect of p-amino benzoic acid on taxane production was less pronounced, and the highest yield of paclitaxel (221.8 μg L−1) was observed when the medium was supplemented with 100 μM of the precursor in combination with methyl jasmonate.Baccatin III was not detected under the conditions used in this experiment and the investigated taxanes were not excreted into the medium.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of light and temperature on the cylindrospermopsin (CYN) production of two Aphanizomenon flos-aquae strains, isolated from North-eastern German lakes, was investigated with semi-continuously growing cultures. A light gradient from 10 to 60 μE m−2 s−1 in combination with temperatures of 16, 20, and 25 °C was tested.CYN concentrations varied by a maximum factor of 2.7 in strain 10E9 with a significant decrease with increasing temperature. Strain 22D11 showed less pronounced changes, i.e. by a factor of 1.6, and without clear relationship to temperature.Reaction patterns of CYN production to changing light intensities are different at different temperatures. In both strains CYN concentrations increase significantly at 20 °C between 10 and 60 μE m−2 s−1, whereas they decrease significantly at 25 °C in the same light gradient. The amount of synthesised CYN is not reflected by growth rates of the strains in a uniform manner. Nonetheless several temperature–light combinations which constitute physiological stress seem to trigger CYN production and particularly CYN release from cells. The lowest growth rate observed at 16 °C and 60 μE m−2 s−1 of strain 22D11 may reflect photoinhibition due to the lower temperature and related limited CO2-fixation. Under these conditions, extracellular CYN concentrations increased to 58% of total CYN, while the share of extracellular CYN of all other light and temperature regimes was 11–26%. From the results and the experimental design we conclude an active release of the toxin into medium to be more likely than mere leakage from cells.  相似文献   

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