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1.
Little is known about how the growth of individual Gambierdiscus species responds to environmental factors. This study examined the effects of temperature (15–34 °C), salinity (15–41) and irradiance (2–664 μmol photons m−2 s−1) on growth of Gambierdiscus: G. australes, G. belizeanus, G. caribaeus, G. carolinianus, G. carpenteri, G. pacificus and G. ruetzleri and one putative new species, Gambierdiscus ribotype 2. Depending on species, temperatures where maximum growth occurred varied between 26.5 and 31.1 °C. The upper and lower thermal limits for all species were between 31–34 °C and 15–21 °C, respectively. The shapes of the temperature vs. growth curves indicated that even small differences of 1–2 °C notably affected growth potentials. Salinities where maximum growth occurred varied between 24.7 and 35, while the lowest salinities supporting growth ranged from <14 to 20.9. These data indicated that Gambierdiscus species are more tolerant of lower salinities than is generally appreciated. Growth of all species began to decline markedly as salinities exceed 35.1–39.4. The highest salinity tested in this study (41), however, was lethal to only one species, Gambierdiscus ribotype 2. The combined salinity data indicated that differences in salinity regimes may affect relative species abundances and distributions, particularly when salinities are <20 and >35. All eight Gambierdiscus species were adapted to relatively low light conditions, exhibiting growth maxima at 50–230 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and requiring only 6–17 μmol photons m−2 s−1 to maintain growth. These low light requirements indicate that Gambierdiscus growth can occur up to 150 m depth in tropical waters, with optimal light regimes often extending to 75 m. The combined temperature, salinity and light requirements of Gambierdiscus can be used to define latitudinal ranges and species-specific habitats, as well as to inform predictive models.  相似文献   

2.
《Process Biochemistry》2007,42(2):210-214
The growth, lipid content and fatty acid composition of Schizochytrium limacinum OUC88 at different temperatures (16, 23, 30 and 37 °C) and salinities (0, 0.9, 1.8, 2.7 and 3.6%, w/v) were analyzed. The strain grew better and lipid contents were higher at 16–30 °C and salinity at 0.9–3.6% (w/v). The adaptive responses of this microbe to temperature and salinity were mainly to regulate the degree of fatty acid unstauration to maintain the normal membrane lipid physical state. However, at 37 °C and 0 salinity, the growth of the strain was inhibited obviously and the lipid content reduced significantly and, some important changes occurred in fatty acid composition, especially the odd-numbered fatty acids 15:0 and 17:0 which amounts increased greatly. In addition, the ratio of DHA to DPA changed at different temperatures and salinities.  相似文献   

3.
《Aquatic Botany》2007,86(3):213-222
Melaleuca ericifolia Sm. (Swamp paperbark) is a common tree species in freshwater and brackish wetlands in southern and eastern Australia. The survival of this species in many wetlands is now threatened by increased salinity and inappropriate water regimes. We examined the response of 5-month-old M. ericifolia seedlings to three water depths (exposed, waterlogged and submerged) at three salinities (2, 49 and 60 dS m−1). Increasing water depth at the lowest salinity did not affect survival, but strongly inhibited seedling growth. Total biomass, leaf area and maximum root length were highest in exposed plants, intermediate in waterlogged plants and lowest in submerged plants. Although completely submerged plants survived for 10 weeks at the lowest salinity, they demonstrated negative growth rates and were unable to extend their shoots above the water surface. At the higher salinities, M. ericifolia seedlings were intolerant of waterlogging and submergence: all plants died after 9 weeks at 60 dS m−1. Soil salinities increased over time, and by Week 10, exceeded external water column salinities in both the exposed and waterlogged treatments. In exposed sediment, ∼90% of plants survived for 10 weeks at 60 dS m−1 even though soil salinities reached ∼76 dS m−1. No mortality occurred in the exposed plants at 49 dS m−1, and small but positive relative growth rates were recorded at Week 10. We conclude that at low salinities M. ericifolia seedlings are highly tolerant of sediment waterlogging, but are unlikely to tolerate prolonged submergence. However, at the higher salinities, M. ericifolia seedlings are intolerant of waterlogging and submergence and died rapidly after 5 weeks exposure to this combination of environmental stressors. This research demonstrates that salinity may restrict the range of water regimes tolerated by aquatic plants.  相似文献   

4.
Massive blooms of the dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides occur annually in the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. The initiation of blooms and their physical transport has been documented and the location of bloom initiation was identified during the 2007 and 2008 blooms. In the present study we combined daily sampling of nutrient concentrations and phytoplankton abundance at a fixed station to determine physical and chemical controls on bloom formation and enhanced underway water quality monitoring (DATAFLOW) during periods when blooms are known to occur. While C. polykrikoides did not reach bloom concentrations until late June during 2009, vegetative cells were present at low concentrations in the Elizabeth River (4 cells ml−1) as early as May 27. Subsequent samples collected from the Lafayette River documented the increase in C. polykrikoides abundance in the upper branches of the Lafayette River from mid-June to early July, when discolored waters were first observed. The 2009 C. polykrikoides bloom began in the Lafayette River when water temperatures were consistently above 25 °C and during a period of calm winds, neap tides, high positive tidal residuals, low nutrient concentrations, and a low dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) to dissolved inorganic phosphorous (DIP) ratio. The pulsing of nutrients associated with intense but highly localized storm activity during the summer months when water temperatures are above 25 °C may play a role in the initiation of C. polykrikoides blooms. The upper Lafayette River appears to be an important area for initiation of algal blooms that then spread to other connected waterways.  相似文献   

5.
Increases in reported incidence of ciguatera fish poisoning (hereafter ciguatera) have been linked to warmer sea temperatures that are known to trigger coral bleaching events. The drivers that trigger blooms of ciguatera-causing dinoflagellates on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) are poorly understood. This study investigated the effects of increased temperatures and lowered salinities, often associated with environmental disturbance events, on the population growth of two strains of the potentially ciguatera-causing dinoflagellate, Gambierdiscus carpenteri (NQAIF116 and NQAIF380). Both strains were isolated from the central GBR with NQAIF116 being an inshore strain and NQAIF380 an isolate from a stable environment of a large coral reef aquarium exhibit in ReefHQ, Townsville, Australia. Species of Gambierdiscus are often found as part of a mixed assemblage of benthic toxic dinoflagellates on macroalgal substrates. The effect of assemblage structure of dinoflagellates on the growth of Gambierdiscus populations has, however, not been explored. The study, therefore investigated the growth of G. carpenteri within mixed assemblages of benthic dinoflagellates. Population growth was monitored over a period of 28 days under three salinities (16, 26 and 36) and three temperature (24, 28 and 34 °C) conditions in a fully crossed experimental design. Temperature and salinity had a significant effect on population growth. Strain NQAIF380 exhibited significantly higher growth at 28 °C compared to strain NQAIF116, which had highest growth at 24 °C. When strain NQAIF116 was co-cultured with the benthic dinoflagellates, Prorocentrum lima and Ostreopsis sp., inhibitory effects on population growth were observed at a salinity of 36. In contrast, growth stimulation of G. carpenteri (strain NQAIF116) was observed at a salinity of 26 and particularly at 16 when co-cultured with Ostreopsis-dominated assemblages. Range expansion of ciguatera-causing dinoflagellates could lead to higher frequency of reported ciguatera illness in populated temperate Australian regions, outside the tropical range of the GBR. Therefore, the findings on salinity and temperature tolerance of two strains of G. carpenteri indicates potential adaptability to different local environmental conditions. These are baseline data for future investigations into the potential southward range expansion of ciguatera-causing dinoflagellates originating from the GBR.  相似文献   

6.
Limited predictability of cyanobacteria and algal harmful blooms (CyanoHABs) impairs the development of adequate water management programs. The Microcystis aeruginosa complex (MAC) is ubiquitous worldwide. Their large colony size and relatively low numerical abundance imply that MAC abundance and presence are usually underestimated in traditional phytoplankton quantifications, which are based on samples of small volume. The objective of this work was twofold: (a) evaluate four sampling strategies of increasing sampling size to detect MAC organisms and (b) asses the predictability of MAC presence using easy-to-measure environmental variables. Sampling strategies were (I) 5–25 mL sedimented water samples inspected under inverted light microscope; (II) 20 L of water samples inspected by on-board naked-eye; (III) samples collected by towing a 25 μm pore size net inspected under light microscope; (IV) naked-eye inspection of 1000–7000 L concentrated water samples collected using a 115 μm-pore plankton net. We evaluated these objectives in a large environmental gradient (800 km) from freshwater to marine water (salinity range = 0–33) covering a wide range of temperatures (10–33 °C), underwater turbidity (0–158 NTU) and wind intensity (0–8 ms−1). Classification Random Forest models (presence/absence of MAC organisms) were constructed and evaluated for each strategy by randomly partitioning data into training (2/3) and test (1/3) sets. A systematic increase in average accuracy (from 51 to 90%) and sensitivity (from 45 to 94%) towards methods with larger sampling size was found (i.e. I–IV). The best obtained model showed a high accuracy (90%) and sensitivity (94%) to detect MAC presence. These results suggest that the presence of MAC organisms can be accurately predicted using easy-to-measure environmental variables once sampling size is adequate. The proposed methodology demands very low costs and could be readily incorporated in most water monitoring plans to provide early warning of MAC occurrence, even when there is a low biomass of organisms.  相似文献   

7.
Prymnesium parvum (golden alga, GA) is a toxigenic harmful alga native to marine ecosystems that has also affected brackish inland waters. The first toxic bloom of GA in the western hemisphere occurred in the Pecos River, one of the saltiest rivers in North America. Environmental factors (water quality) associated with GA occurrence in this basin, however, have not been examined. Water quality and GA presence and abundance were determined at eight sites in the Pecos River basin with or without prior history of toxic blooms. Sampling was conducted monthly from January 2012 to July 2013. Specific conductance (salinity) varied spatiotemporally between 4408 and 73,786 μS/cm. Results of graphical, principal component (PCA), and zero-inflated Poisson (ZIP) regression analyses indicated that the incidence and abundance of GA are reduced as salinity increases spatiotemporally. LOWESS regression and correlation analyses of archived data for specific conductance and GA abundance at one of the study sites retrospectively confirmed the negative association between these variables. Results of PCA also suggested that at <∼15,000 μS/cm, GA was present at a relatively wide range of nutrient (nitrogen and phosphorus) concentrations whereas at higher salinity, GA was observed only at mid-to-high nutrient levels. Generally consistent with earlier studies, results of ZIP regression indicated that GA presence is positively associated with organic phosphorus and in samples where GA is present, GA abundance is positively associated with organic nitrogen and negatively associated with inorganic nitrogen. This is the first report of an inverse relation between salinity and GA presence and abundance in riverine waters and of interaction effects of salinity and nutrients in the field. These observations contribute to a more complete understanding of environmental conditions that influence GA distribution in inland waters.  相似文献   

8.
《Harmful algae》2010,9(6):898-909
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   

9.
《Aquatic Botany》2007,86(1):14-24
The long-term sustainability of seagrasses in the subtropics and tropics depends on their ability to adapt to shifts in salinity regimes, particularly in light of present increases in coastal freshwater extractions and future climate change scenarios. Although there are major concerns world-wide on increased salinity in coastal estuaries, there is little quantitative information on the specific upper salinity tolerance of tropical and subtropical seagrass species. We examined seagrass hypersalinity tolerance under two scenarios: (1) when salinity is raised rapidly simulating a pulsed event, such as exposure to brine effluent, and (2) when salinity is raised slowly, characteristic of field conditions in shallow evaporative basins; the first in hydroponics (Experiments I and II) and the second in large mesocosms using intact sediment cores from the field (Experiment III). The three tropical seagrass species investigated in this study were highly tolerant of hypersaline conditions with a slow rate of salinity increase (1 psu d−1). None of the three species elicited total shoot mortality across the range of salinities examined (35–70 psu over 30 days exposures); representing in situ exposure ranges in Florida Bay, a shallow semi-enclosed subtropical lagoon with restricted circulation. Based on stress indicators, shoot decline, growth rates, and PAM florescence, all three species were able to tolerate salinities up to 55 psu, with Thalassia testudinum (60 psu) and Halodule wrightii (65 psu) eliciting a slightly higher salinity threshold than Ruppia maritima (55 psu). However, when salinity was pulsed, without a slow osmotic adjustment period, threshold levels dropped 20 psu to approximately 45 psu for T. testudinum. While we found these three seagrass species to be highly tolerant of high salinity, and conclude that hypersalinity probably does not solely cause seagrass dieoff events in Florida Bay, high salinity can modify carbon and O2 balance in the plant, potentially affecting the long-term health of the seagrass community.  相似文献   

10.
Phragmites karka (Retz.) Trin, ex. steud, a perennial reed with creeping rhizome from the family Poaceae, is distributed as pure population in brackish water swamps. Populations primarily propagate using ramets but also produce numerous seeds which form part of the seed bank after dispersal and are exposed to extremes of temperature, drought, and salinity stress. Seeds were germinated under a range of salinity (0, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 mM NaCl) and temperature (10/20 °C, 15/25 °C, 20/30 °C, 25/35 °C, night/day) regimes in 12 h light:12 h dark photoperiod or in complete darkness with 0, 5, 10, 25 mM CaCl2. Salinity, absence of light and high temperature (25/35 °C) reduced germination while calcium generally reversed this effect, more so at cooler temperature regimes. Calcareous soil around Karachi would help alleviate the salinity effect on the germination of P. karka and facilitate its survival.  相似文献   

11.
To evaluate the effect of salinity on the catalyzing ability of β-glucosidase in the marine fungus Aspergillus niger, the thermodynamic parameters of the β-glucosidase were investigated at different salinities. At the optimum salinity of 6% NaCl (w/v) solution, the optimum temperature and pH of the β-glucosidase activity was 66 °C and 5.0, respectively. Under these conditions, the β-glucosidase activity increased 1.46 fold. The half-life of denaturation in 6% NaCl (w/v) solution was approximately twice as long as that in NaCl free solution. The Gibb's free energy for denaturation, ΔG, was 2 kJ/mol higher in 6% NaCl (w/v) solution than in NaCl free solution. The melting point (68.51 °C) in 6% NaCl (w/v) solution was 1.71 °C higher than that (66.80 °C) in NaCl free solution. Similarly, the activity and thermostability of the pure β-glucosidase increased remarkably at high salinity. The thermostable β-glucosidase, of which the activity and the thermostability are remarkably enhanced at high salinity, is valuable for industrial hydrolyzation of cellulose in high salinity environments.  相似文献   

12.
《Process Biochemistry》2010,45(10):1730-1737
An aerobic xylanolytic Gracilibacillus sp. TSCPVG growing at moderate to extreme salinity (1–30%) and neutral to alkaline pH (6.5–10.5) was isolated from the salt fields near Sambhar district of Rajasthan, India. β-xylanase (18.44 U/ml) and β-xylosidase (1.01 U/ml) were produced in 60 h in the GSL-2 mineral base medium with additions of (in g/l) Birchwood xylan (7.5), yeast extract (10.0), tryptone (8.0), proline (2.0), thiamine (2.0), Tween-40 (2.0) and NaCl (35) at pH 7.5, 30 °C and 180 rpm. The β-xylanase was active within a broad salinity range (0–30% NaCl), pH (5.0–10.5) and temperature (50–70 °C). It exhibited maximal activity with 3.5% NaCl, pH 7.5 at 60 °C. It was extremely halotolerant retaining more than 80% of activity at 0 and 30% NaCl and alkali-tolerant retaining 76% of activity at pH 10.5. The acetone precipitated xylanase was highly stable (100%) at variable salinities of 0–30% NaCl, pH of 5.0–10.5 and temperatures of 0–60 °C for 48 h. HPLC analysis showed xylose, arabinose and xylooligosaccharides as hydrolysis products of xylan. This is the first report on hemi-cellulose degrading halo-alkali-thermotolerant enzyme from a moderately halophilic Gram-positive Gracilibacillus species.  相似文献   

13.
《Harmful algae》2003,2(2):89-99
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) have posed a serious threat to the aquaculture and fisheries industries in recent years, especially in Asia. During 1998 there were several particularly serious blooms in the coastal waters of south China, which caused a serious damage to aquaculture. We report a massive dinoflagellate bloom near the mouth of Pearl River in November 1998 with analyses of data from both in situ sea water measurements and satellites. A multi-parameter environmental mapping system was used to obtain real-time measurements of water quality properties and wind data through the algal bloom area, which allow us to compare water measurements from inside and outside of the bloom areas. This bloom with high concentrations of algal cells was evident as a series of red colored parallel bands of surface water that were 100–300 m long and 10–30 m wide with a total area of about 20–30 km2 by visual. The algal density reached 3.8×107 cells l−1 and the surface chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentration was high. The algal species has been identified as Gymnodinium cf. catenatum Graham. The water column in the bloom area was stratified, where the surface temperature was 24–25 °C, the salinity was 18–20%, and the northern wind was about 3–4 m s−1 in the bloom area. The SeaWiFS image has shown high Chl-a area coinciding with the bloom area. The sea surface temperature (SST) image of the Pearl River estuary combined with the in situ measurements indicated that the bloom occurred along a mixing front between cooler lower salinity river water and warmer higher saline South China Sea (SCS) water.  相似文献   

14.
Marine toxic dinoflagellates of the genus Gambierdiscus are the causative agents of ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP), a seafood poisoning that is widespread in tropical, subtropical and temperate regions of the world. In the main island of Japan, distributions of Gambierdiscus australes, Gambierdiscus scabrosus and two phylotypes of Gambierdiscus spp. type 2 and type 3, have been reported. To discuss the bloom dynamics of these Japanese species/phylotypes of Gambierdiscus, first we tested six culture media to optimize growth conditions and then clarified the effects of temperature and salinity and temperature–salinity interactions on growth. All strains of the species/phylotypes tested showed the highest cell yields when they were cultivated in IMK/2 medium. G. australes, G. scabrosus and Gambierdiscus sp. type 2 grew in the range 17.5–30 °C, whereas Gambierdiscus sp. type 3 grew in 15–25 °C. The semi-optimal temperature ranges (≥80% of the maximal growth rate) of the former three species/phylotypes were 19–28 °C, 24–31 °C and 21–28 °C, respectively, whereas that of the latter phylotype was 22–25 °C. Hence, Gambierdiscus sp. type 3 may be adapted to relatively lower water temperatures of ≤25 °C. In contrast, G. australes, G. scabrosus and Gambierdiscus sp. type 2 presumably possess adaptability to relatively high water temperatures. The optimal temperature for G. scabrosus was 30 °C, whereas the optimal temperature for the others was 25 °C. G. australes and Gambierdiscus sp. type 3 grew in a salinity range of 25–40 whereas G. scabrosus and Gambierdiscus sp. type 2 grew in salinity 20–40. Furthermore, the semi-optimal salinity range of G. australes, G. scabrosus, Gambierdiscus spp. type 2 and type 3 were salinity 27–38, 24–36, 22–36 and 29–37, respectively. Among the species/phylotypes, G. scabrosus and Gambierdiscus sp. type 2 grew even at salinity 20 where the others did not grow, thus possessing adaptability to low salinity waters. Our results clearly demonstrate that the optimal and tolerable temperature–salinity conditions differ among Japanese Gambierdiscus species/phylotypes. Considering these results, temperature–salinity interactions may play an important role in bloom dynamics and the distribution of the Gambierdiscus species/phylotypes in Japanese coastal waters.  相似文献   

15.
The germination characteristics of Alexandrium minutum cysts from the Fal estuary were studied at different conditions of temperature (4–24 °C) and salinity (15–35‰) and in the dark and low light intensity (2 μmol?2 s?1). Sediment sub-samples were directly cultured and processed at the end of the experiment for counts of non-germinated cysts. A decrease in the number of cysts was interpreted as germination that was calculated by comparison of the number of cysts over time with that of initial counts. The 50% germination time (time at which 50% of the total initial number of cysts had germinated) was calculated for each condition. A. minutum did not germinate in the dark but it germinated under all other conditions studied. Highest germination occurred at salinities of 30 psu and 35 psu and temperatures from 8 °C to 24 °C (germination rate—expressed as the inverse of the 50% germination time: 1.1–1.2). Lowest germination occurred at 15 psu and 4 °C and 24 °C (germination rate: 3.9–3.8). However, little variation in germination rates occurred across the conditions studied. As these conditions represent those likely in the estuary it is probable that A. minutum cysts on the surface of the sediments represent a constant source of cells to the water column and sediment disturbance (revealing buried cysts) could rapidly inoculate the water column with vegetative cells. This data was used to develop a model for Alexandrium germination from coastal sediments.  相似文献   

16.
Rising temperatures (1.4–6 °C) due to climate change have been predicted to increase cyanobacterial bloom occurrences in temperate water bodies; however, the impacts of warming on tropical cyanobacterial blooms are unknown. We examined the effects of four different temperatures on the growth rates and microcystin (MC) production of five tropical Microcystis isolates (M. ichthyoblabe (two strains), M. viridis, M. flos-aquae, and M. aeruginosa). The temperature treatments are based on current temperature range in Singapore's reservoirs (27 °C and 30 °C), as well as projected mean (33 °C) and maximum temperatures (36 °C) based on tropical climate change estimates of +6 °C in air temperature. Increasing temperatures did not significantly affect the maximum growth rates of most Microcystis strains. Higher growth rates were only observed in one M. ichthyoblabe strain at 33 °C and M. flos-aquae at 30 °C where both were isolated from the same reservoir. MC-RR and MC-LR were produced in varying amounts by all four species of Microcystis. Raised temperatures of 33 °C were found to boost total MC cell quota for three Microcystis strains although further increase to 36 °C led to a sharp decrease in total MC cell quota for all five Microcystis strains. Increasing temperature also led to higher MC-LR:MC-RR cell quota ratios in M. ichthyoblabe. Our study suggests that higher mean water temperatures resulting from climate change will generally not influence growth rates of Microcystis spp. in Singapore except for increases in M. ichthyoblabe strains. However, toxin cell quota may increase under moderate warming scenarios depending on the species.  相似文献   

17.
In the past years, late summer blooms of the bioluminescent dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii have become a recurrent phenomenon in coastal waters of the central and Northern Baltic Sea. This paper reports exceptionally high cell concentrations (105 to 106 cells L?1) of the species found during bioluminescent blooms in 2003 and 2004 in a shallow embayment of the Åland archipelago at the SW coast of Finland. Clonal cultures were established for morphological, molecular, toxicological and ecophysiological investigations to characterize the Finnish populations and compare them to other global A. ostenfeldii isolates. The Finnish isolates exhibited typical morphological features of A. ostenfeldii such as large size, a prominent ventral pore and an orthogonally bent first apical plate. However, unambiguous differentiation from closely related Alexandrium peruvianum was difficult due to considerable variation of sulcal anterior plate shapes. The Finnish strains were genetically distinct from other isolates of the species, but phylogenetic analyses revealed a close relationship to isolates from southern England and an A. peruvianum morphotype from the Spanish Mediterranean. Together these isolates formed a distinct clade which was separated from a clade containing other Northern European, North American and New Zealand populations. Toxin analyses confirmed the presence of the PSP toxins GTX2, GTX3 and STX in both Finnish isolates with GTX3 being the dominant toxin. Total relative PSP toxin contents were moderate, ranging from approximately 6 to 15 fmol cell?1 at local salinities of 5 and 10 psu, respectively. Spirolides were not detected. Salinity tolerance experiments showed that the Finnish isolates were well adapted to grow at the low salinities of the Baltic Sea. With a salinity range of approximately 6 to 20–25 psu, Baltic populations are physiologically distinct from their marine relatives. Vigorous production of different cyst types in the cultures suggest that cysts may play a crucial role in the survival and retainment of A. ostenfeldii populations in the Baltic Sea.  相似文献   

18.
Members of the Chenopodiaceae are well adapted to both salt and drought stress and can serve as model species to understand the mechanisms of tolerance in plants. We grew Atriplex hortensis (ATHO), A. canescens (ATCA), and A. lentiformis (ATLE) along a NaCL salinity gradient under non-water-limited conditions and in drying soils in greenhouse experiments. The species differed in photosynthetic carbon fixation pathway, capacity for sodium uptake, and habitat preferences. Under non-water-limited conditions, ATLE (C4) maintained high growth rates up to 30 g L−1 NaCl. ATHO (C3) had lower growth than ATLE at high salinities, while ATCA (C4) grew more slowly than either ATLE or ATHO and showed no net growth above 20 g L−1 NaCl. ATHO and ATLE accumulated twice as much sodium in their shoots as ATCA, but all three species had increasing sodium levels at higher salinities. Potassium, magnesium and calcium levels were relatively constant over the salinity gradient. All three species showed marked accumulation of chloride across the salinity gradient, whereas nitrate, phosphorous and sulfate decreased with salinity. The effect of drought was simulated by growing plants in sealed pots with an initial charge of water plus NaCl, and allowing them to grow to the end point at which they no longer were able to extract water from the soil solution. Drought and salinity were not additive stress factors for Atriplex spp. in this experiment. NaCl increased their ability to extract water from the soil solution compared to fresh water controls. ATLE showed increased shoot dry matter production and increased water use efficiency (WUE) as initial salinity levels increased from 0 to 30 g L−1 NaCl, whereas dry matter production and WUE peaked at 5 g L−1 for ATHO and ATCA. Final soil moisture salinities tolerated by species were 85 g L−1, 55 g L−1 and 160 g L−1 NaCl for ATHO, ATCA and ATLE, respectively. C4 photosynthesis and sodium accumulation in shoots were associated with high drought and salt tolerance.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Gangetic delta is considered as the homeland of cholera, which is thought to be influenced by changes in populations of estuarine Vibrio cholerae. We aim to identify the environmental, biotic and abiotic driving forces influencing the V. cholerae dynamics in riverine-estuarine environment of southern deltaic Bengal. Cultivable Vibrio count (CVC) ranged between 1 and 103 colony forming units (CFU)/mL at a salinity gradient of 1.9–30 practical salinity unit (PSU). Increased water temperatrure during summer influences the higher CVC followed by a sudden fall along with the onset of monsoon upto winter. While summer V. cholerae O1 peak (50–100 CFU/mL) can be associated with higher water temperature (P < 0.05) and higher turbidity (P < 0.005); sharp fall during monsoon (15–45 CFU/mL) is attributed to reduced salinity (25–2.5 PSU). Plankton attached V. cholerae O1 varied between 10 and 1000 CFU/mL with a highest peak at winter followed by summer and monsoon. Prevalence of toxigenic V. cholerae O1 in low salinity (2–7.5 PSU) during monsoon identifies that high water temperature (>25 °C), higher turbidity (>100 NTU) and lower salinity plays the pivotal role in toxicity acquisition. Present investigation establishes the role of Sundarban mangrove, where V. cholerae exist in an avirulent condition. During migration towards low saline inland system, V. cholerae pool possibly acquires toxin genes under the influence of environmental factors. Planktonic attachment is possibly a survival strategy at adverse condition, when they do not acquire any toxin gene. Seasonal V. cholerae dynamics has been thoroughly established in environmental settings of high saline mangrove and brackish water flowing to inland low saline condition.  相似文献   

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