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1.
Recently, a hitherto unknown feeding strategy, the toxic mucus trap, was discovered in the dinoflagellate Alexandrium pseudogonyaulax. In this study, over 40 strains of 8 different Alexandrium species (A. ostenfeldii, A. tamarense, A. catenella, A. taylorii, A. margalefii, A. hiranoi, A. insuetum and A. pseudogonyaulax) were screened for their ability to ingest prey and/or to form mucus traps. The mucus trap feeding strategy, where a mucus trap is towed by the longitudinal flagellum remains unique to A. pseudogonyaulax. In additional experiments, details of the trap were examined and quantified, such as speed and frequency of trap formation as well as what happens to the trap after the A. pseudogonyaulax cell detaches from it. The percentage of A. pseudogonyaulax cells producing a mucus trap and the number of prey cells caught increased with increasing prey concentration, whereas the physical size of the traps was independent of prey concentration. In one strain given an excess of prey, within 1 h over 90% of individual A. pseudogonyaulax cells had formed a trap, each containing an average of 45 prey cells. Individual A. pseudogonyaulax cells steadily produced traps and up to 5 traps were produced by a single A. pseudogonyaulax cell after only 24 h. The attachment of an A. pseudogonyaulax cell to the trap only ceased during, and just following, cell division. Prey cells were, to some extent, capable of escaping from the mucus trap, but the trap remained sticky and continued catching prey for up to 48 h after the trap had been abandoned by the A. pseudogonyaulax cell. These results reveal that the effects of the mucus trap extend far beyond the removal of prey through ingestion, and the potential impact of this strategy on surrounding cells is high.  相似文献   

2.
Detection of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins in scallops from the west coast of Greenland exceeding the 800 μg toxin/kg shellfish limit led to an investigation with the aim of finding the responsible organism(s). Three strains of Alexandrium Halim were established from single cell isolations. Morphological identification of the strains and determination of their position within the genus by LSU rDNA sequences was carried out. Light microscopy revealed that the three strains was of the Alexandrium tamarense morphotype, and bayesian and neighbor-joining analyses of the LSU rDNA sequences placed them within Group I of the A. tamarense species complex. The toxicity and toxin profiles of the strains were measured by liquid chromatography fluorescence detection (LC-FD) and their identity was confirmed by liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). The three strains all turned out to be toxic and all produced large proportions (>60% total mol) of gonyautoxins 1 and 4 (GTX1/GTX4). This is the first record of saxitoxin producers from western Greenland. The toxin profiles were atypical for A. tamarense in their absence of N-sulfocarbanoyl C1/C2 or B1/B2 toxins. Rather the high molar percentage of GTX1/GTX4, the lesser amounts of only carbamoyl toxins and the absence of decarbamoyl derivatives are more characteristic features of A. minutum strains. This may indicate that the genetically determined toxin profiles in Alexandrium species are more complex than previously appreciated.  相似文献   

3.
The vernal occurrence of toxic dinoflagellates in the Alexandrium tamarense/Alexandrium fundyense species complex in an enclosed embayment of Narragansett Bay (Wickford Cove, Rhode Island) was documented during 2005 and 2009–2012. This is the first report of regular appearance of the Alexandrium fundyense/Alexandrium tamarense species complex in Narragansett Bay. Thecal plate analysis of clonal isolates using SEM revealed cells morphologically consistent with both Alexandrium tamarense Lebour (Balech) and Alexandrium fundyense Balech. Additionally, molecular analyses confirmed that the partial sequences for 18S through the D1–D2 region of 28S were consistent with the identity of the two Alexandrium species. Toxin analyses revealed the presence of a suite of toxins (C1/2, B1 (GTX-5), STX, GTX-2/3. Neo, and GTX-1/4) in both Alexandrium tamarense (6.31 fmol cell−1 STX equiv.) and Alexandrium fundyense (9.56 fmol cell−1 STX equiv.) isolated from Wickford Cove; the toxicity of a Narragansett Bay Alexandrium peruvianum isolate (1.79 fmol cell−1 STX equiv.) was also determined. Combined Alexandrium tamarense/Alexandrium fundyense abundance in Wickford Cove reached a peak abundance of 1280 cells L−1 (May of 2010), with the combined abundance routinely exceeding levels leading to shellfishing closures in other systems. The toxic Alexandrium tamarense/Alexandrium fundyense species complex appears to be a regular component of the lower Narragansett Bay phytoplankton community, either newly emergent or previously overlooked by extant monitoring programs.  相似文献   

4.
Alexandrium species can be very difficult to identify, with A. catenella, A. tamarense, and A. fundyense that compose “Alexandrium tamarense species complex” (Atama complex) as a distinct example. DNA barcoding is promising to offer a solution but remains to be established. In this study, we examined the utility of ITS in resolving the Atama species complex, by analyzing previously studied strains plus unstudied Chinese strains within the LSU- and SSU-rDNA based group/clade frameworks recently established. We further investigated the presence of intragenomic polymorphism and its implications in species delimitation. Similar to the previous SSU and LSU results, our ITS-based phylogenies divided the complex to five clusters, but with longer and evener branch lengths between the clusters. Based on the ITS region, the inter-cluster genetic distances (p = 0.134–0.216) were consistently and substantially greater than intra-cluster genetic distances (p = 0.000–0.066), with an average inter-cluster (species) distance (p = 0.167) 7.6-fold of the average intraspecific difference (p = 0.022), qualifying the approximately 510–520 bp ITS as a DNA barcode for Atama complex. We detected varying levels of intragenomic polymorphism in ITS but found that this did not impact the taxon-resolving power of this gene. With this DNA barcode, the new East and South China Sea strains and one Antarctic strain were placed in Clade IIC/Group IV, even though there were 7–10 polymorphic sites in their ITS, in contrast to none in SSU. Furthermore, our results suggest that the five clusters are recognizable as distinct species according to the phylogenetic species concept. Based on the phylogenetic placements of the type-locality strains of the existing three morphospecies and the dominant localities of other strains, we propose that Group I/Clade I be designated as A. fundyense, Group III/Clade IIB as A. tamarense, Group IV/Clade IIC as A. catenella, Group II/Clade IIA as A. mediterranis, and Group V/Clade IID as A. australis.  相似文献   

5.
In December 2001, a large-scale bloom of the paralytic shellfish toxin-producing dinoflagellate, Alexandrium tamiyavanichii Balech (Dinophyceae) was observed in the Seto Inland Sea, Japan. During the bloom, we conducted a field survey in the Seto Inland Sea and collected samples of bloom water in order to assess the toxicity and toxic components of A. tamiyavanichii. The results of the field survey indicated that A. tamiyavanichii was observed frequently at water temperatures between 17.8 and 20.0 °C, and the maximum cell density at the four localities was ca. 2000 cells L?1 (Fukuyama Bay). To elucidate the toxicity and toxic components of A. tamiyavanichii, 54 strains (28 strains from Fukuyama Bay, 12 strains from Kasato Bay, 9 strains from Uchinoumi, and 5 strains from Inokushi Bay) were established from bloom water samples, and were then subject of toxin analyses via fluorescence HPLC. The toxic components of A. tamiyavanichii showed that N-sulfocarbamoyl (C-) 2 and Gonyautoxins (GTX) 4 were the principal toxins and C3+4, GTX 2+3, GTX 5, neosaxitoxin (neoSTX) and saxitoxin (STX) were minor components. The toxicity of the A. tamiyavanichii cells was higher than that of the other toxic species, A. tamarense and A. catenella. The toxic components in all strains among the four localities were closely related, and thus the recent A. tamiyavanichii population in the Seto Inland Sea appears to originate from a single population.  相似文献   

6.
The toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella has been detected in the southern Chile since 1972, causing severe negative impacts on public health and aquaculture activities. Several environmental factors have been determined to affect growth and toxin production in Alexandrium strains. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of four combined conditions of two temperatures (10 and 15 °C) and two salinities (15 and 35 psu) on the growth and the Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) toxin content and composition in four Chilean strains of A. catenella (PFB41, PFB42, PFB37 and PFB38), isolated during a summer outbreak occurred in southern Chile in 2009. The growth curves showed a higher effect of the salinity in strains PFB41 and PFB42 than in strains PFB37 and PFB38. The values of growth rates and maximum cell densities ranged from 0.25 to 0.73 div day−1 and 1.1 × 104 to 5.2 × 104 cells mL−1, respectively. All of the strains showed the highest values for both growth parameters at 15 °C and 35 psu. In general, growth parameters were higher at 35 psu independently of the temperature. On the other hand, the total PSP toxin content ranged widely from 3.99 to 239 fmol cell−1. The highest values of PSP toxin content were attained at 10 °C and 35 psu for all of the strains, at both stages of growth. All of the strains displayed different toxin compositions, with neoSTX, GTX4-1, GTX3-2 and GTX5 being the main toxins detected. The results showed significant differences in the absolute values of growth and toxin production parameters among the strains grown under the same culture conditions, and for each strain grown under different combined conditions of temperature and salinity. These findings demonstrate that abiotic factors can differentially affect the population dynamics of the A. catenella toxic genotypes, thus making it extremely difficult to predict the ecological behavior of this species in the field in terms of the intensity of a potential outbreak.  相似文献   

7.
During phytoplankton monitoring in the Beagle Channel (≈54°52′ S, 67°32′ W) a previously undetected Alexandrium species was observed in coincidence with mouse bioassay toxicity. Detailed thecal plates analysis using epifluorescence and scanning electron microscopy revealed the presence of the Alexandrium ostenfeldii species complex, showing a mixture of the diagnostic features usually used to discriminate between the morphospecies A. ostenfeldii and A. peruvianum. Cells of the A. ostenfeldii complex were commonly observed during spring after the main annual diatom bloom, when temperatures and salinities were respectively around 7.5–10 °C and 30–30.5 psu, and nutrients showed a seasonal decrease. Toxin analysis by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry revealed the production of 13-desmethyl spirolide C and 20-methyl spirolide G in cell cultures. The cellular contain of spirolides during exponential phase growth was 0.5906 ± 0.0032 and 0.1577 ± 0.0023 pg cell−1 for 13-desMe-C and 20-Me-G, respectively. A third unknown compound, with a structure resembling that of spirolides was also detected in culture. Moreover, an additional compound with a similar m/z (692) than that of 13-desMe-C but presenting a higher retention time (Rt = 40.5 min) was found in high proportions in mussel samples. PSP toxins were present at low concentration in mussels but were not detected in cultures. These results extend the world-wide distribution of toxic strains of the A. ostenfeldii complex to the Beagle Channel (southern South America), where toxic events have been traditionally linked to the presence of Alexandrium catenella. This is the first confirmed occurrence of spirolides in mussels and plankton from Argentina, which highlights the importance of monitoring these toxins and their producing organisms to protect public health and improve the management of shellfish resources.  相似文献   

8.
The toxigenic genus Alexandrium includes ∼30 species, but information about its biogeography at a regional scale is limited. In this study, we explored the diversity of Alexandrium along the coast of China by incubating resting cysts collected from 7 sites. A total of 231 strains of Alexandrium belonging to 7 morphospecies were found. Among them, Alexandrium andersonii, Alexandrium fraterculum, Alexandrium leei, Alexandrium pseudogonyaulax, and Alexandrium tamutum were recorded from the China Sea for the first time. Partial large subunit (LSU) and/or internal transcribed spacer region (ITS1, ITS2, and 5.8S rDNA) sequences revealed two ribotypes of Alexandrium andersonii, Alexandrium leei, and Alexandrium tamarense: Atama complex Group I and IV. Atama complex Group I was exclusively distributed in the Yellow Sea and the Bohai Sea, whereas Group IV was restricted to the East China Sea and South China Sea. Atama complex Group I produced mainly N-sulfocarbamoyl toxins (C1/C2, 61–79% of total toxins) and gonyautoxins (GTX1/4, 17–37%). Alexandrium ostenfeldii strain ASBH01 produced NEO and STX exclusively (65% and 35%, respectively). Our results support the premise that Atama complex Group I is endemic to the Asian Pacific and includes cold water species, whereas Atama complex Group IV tends to inhabit warmer waters.  相似文献   

9.
The 5.8S ribosomal RNA (rDNA) gene and flanking internal transcribed spacers (ITS1 and ITS2)from 9 isolates of Alexandrium catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Taylor, 11 isolates of A. tamarense (Lebour) Taylor, and single isolates of A. affine (Inoue et Fukuyo) Balech, A. insuetum Balech, and A. pseudogonyaulax (Biecheler) Horiguchi ex Yuki et Fukuyo comb. nov. from various locations in Japan were amplified using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subjected to restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. PCR products from all strains were approximately 610 bp, inclusive of a limited region of the 18S and 28S rRNA coding regions. RFLP analysis using four restriction enzymes revealed six distinct classes of rDNA (“ITS types”). Restriction patterns of A. catenella were uniform at the intra-specific level and clearly distinguishable from those of A. tamarense. The patterns associated with A. tamarense (“tamarense group”) were also uniform except for one strain, WKS-1. Some restriction fragments from WKS-1 were in common with those of A. catenella or A. tamarense, whereas some were distinct from all Alexandrium species tested. Alexandrium affine, A. insuetum, and A. pseudogonyaulax carry unique ITS types. The ITSs of the “tamarense group” exhibit sequence heterogeneity. In contrast, the ITSs of all other isolates (including WKS-1) appear homogeneous. RFLP analysis of the 5.8S rDNA and flanking ITSs regions from Alexandrium species reveals useful taxonomic and genetic markers at the species and/or population levels.  相似文献   

10.
The diversity and biogeography of populations of the toxigenic marine dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium, a major global cause of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP), are represented by only a few studies based upon a low number of cultured isolates and remain poorly described in Arctic and sub-Arctic waters. Multiple clonal isolates (n = 22) of the Alexandrium tamarense species complex, and a single isolate of A. tamutum, were collected from the water column while on board an oceanographic expedition to the west coast of Greenland. After culturing of these isolates under controlled conditions, their phylogenetic affinities within the genus Alexandrium were characterized by sequence analysis of nuclear large sub-unit (LSU) rDNA. Based upon morphological and molecular genetic criteria, all isolates of the A. tamarense species complex were consistent with membership in the Group I ribotype (previously known as the North American ribotype). Phenotypic signatures were also analyzed based upon their respective profiles of paralytic shellfish toxins (PST) and allelochemical interactions against a target cryptophyte Rhodomonas, as determined by lytic potency. All isolates conforming to the A. tamarense Group I produced PST, but no toxins were detected in A. tamutum P2E2. Unusually, only carbamoyl toxins were produced among the A. tamarense Group I isolates from Greenland; sulfocarbamoyl derivatives, generally present in A. tamarense population from other locations, including the Arctic, North Pacific and North Atlantic, were absent from all isolates. Allelochemical activity, causing cell lysis of Rhodomonas, but generally being unrelated to cellular PST, was expressed by all A. tamarense isolates and also by A. tamutum, but varied widely in potency. Comparison of the genotypic (rDNA) and phenotypic (PST profile, allelochemical activity) characteristics of Greenland isolates with those of other Arctic populations reveals a complex pattern of intra-specific diversity. Estimation of diversity relationships is problematic because of the distinct patterns of divergence and lack of evidence of linkage among the alternative biomarkers and morphology. Nevertheless, such studies are necessary as the basis for constructing hindcasting scenarios and predicting changes in Alexandrium species distribution in the Arctic from the regional to the global scale.  相似文献   

11.
Since resting cysts are a potential seeding source for blooms, the presence of these cysts in sediments is a marker of an established population for a number of harmful algal species. The spatial patterns of cyst density in relation to sediment characteristics and hydrodynamics are still largely misunderstood. This study investigated the spatial distribution of resting cysts belonging to the Alexandrium tamarense species complex (Dinophyceae) in sediments of a Mediterranean coastal lagoon (Thau Lagoon, France). This lagoon, hosting shellfish farming, is regularly impacted by toxic Alexandrium catenella blooms. The average cyst density across the whole lagoon was rather low, <20 cysts g−1 of dry sediment (DS). However, densities varied widely among sampled stations, with the highest density (∼440 cysts g−1 DS) recorded in a shallow cove named Crique-de-l’Angle, which is the only area where dense blooms of A. catenella and A. tamarense have been recorded in the years preceding this survey. An analysis using spatial autoregressive models demonstrated that cyst densities were highly spatially autocorrelated (indicating that close stations tended to have more similar cyst densities) with accumulation sites. With respect to sediment characteristics (5 granulometric fractions <2 mm and biochemical components), the highest densities were found in silty sediments containing high proportions of water and organic matter. Nevertheless, the linkage between cyst density and sediment structure was not always verified; this reflected the influence of hydrodynamics on the sedimentation of cysts and sediment particles, and on the dispersal of cysts away from the bloom area by wind-induced currents, suggesting that hydrodynamics was responsible for the spatially autocorrelated distribution of cyst densities.  相似文献   

12.
At present 8 species of Alexandrium genus have been found in seas and adjacent waters of Russia: A. acatenella, A. catenella, A. insuetum, A. margalefii, A. ostenfeldii, A. pseudogonyaulax, A. tamarense, and A. tamutum. The distribution and population density of Alexandrium species varied within the surveyed area of the Pacific: in the Sea of Japan and Sea of Okhotsk, 7 species were recorded; 3 species were recorded along the Pacific coast of Kamchatka; and 2 species were found in the Bering Sea. A. tamarense was the most widespread and abundant species over the area. A. insuetum was recorded only in the Sea of Japan, and A. catenella, in the Sea of Okhotsk (Terpeniya Bay). The highest concentration of Alexandrium spp. (2–7 million cells/l) was recorded along the Pacific coast of Kamchatka and in the Bering Sea; in the Sea of Okhotsk, a rather high concentration (51000 cells/l) was registered in Aniva Bay; in the Sea of Japan, the highest concentration was recorded in Peter the Great Bay (6000 cells/l). The distribution of cysts (spores) in surface sediments of the Pacific coast of Russia as a whole reflected the pattern of distribution of vegetative cells of Alexandrium. Cysts of Alexandrium cf. tamarense prevailed all over the area, with the maximum concentration along the Pacific coast of Kamchatka. Beyond that type of cysts, insignificant numbers of cysts of Alexandrium cf. minutum were recorded in Peter the Great Bay and Aniva Bay. Analysis of seasonal dynamics revealed that cells of Alexandrium spp. occurred in Peter the Great Bay from June up to September, and along the Pacific coast of Kamchatka from April to October. In the first region, the maximum density was recorded in August; it was provided by A. pseudogonyaulax (59% of the total density of Alexandrium), A. tamarense (35%), and A. insuetum (6%). In the second region, it was recorded in July, thanks only to development of A. tamarense.  相似文献   

13.
Blooms of toxic dinoflagellates can co-occur with mass mortality events associated with herpesvirus OsHV-1 μVar infection that have been decimating Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas spat and juveniles every summer since 2008 in France. This study investigated the possible effect of a harmful dinoflagellate, Alexandrium catenella, a producer of Paralytic Shellfish Toxins (PSTs), upon the oyster spat–herpesvirus interaction. Oyster spat from a hatchery were challenged by cohabitation with oysters contaminated in the field with OsHV-1 μVar and possibly other pathogens. Simultaneously, the oysters were exposed to cultured A. catenella. Infection with OsHV-1 μVar and PST accumulation were measured after 4 days of experimental exposure.Exposure to Alexandrium catenella modified the host–pathogen interaction by reducing prevalence of OsHV-1 μVar infection. In addition, oysters challenged with OsHV-1 μVar and possibly other pathogens from the environment accumulated smaller amounts of PSTs than unchallenged oysters. Three possible mechanisms are suggested by these results: (i) possible direct interactions between A. catenella and herpesvirus (or associated pathogens) could reduce viral transmission and algal availability for oyster consumption; (ii) oyster feeding behavior or digestive functions may have been altered, thus decreasing both uptake of viral particles and consumption or digestion of toxic algae and consequent toxin accumulation; (iii) immuno-activation by A. catenella could enhance defense efficiency against OsHV-1 μVar infection. These findings suggest further research on relationships between OsHV-1 μVar and toxic dinoflagellates and their combined effects upon disease transmission and proliferation processes, as well as on oyster physiological and immunological involvement in this complex, tripartite interaction.  相似文献   

14.
The 5.8S ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) and flanking internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2 (ITS1 and ITS2) from 7 isolates of Alexandrium catenella (Wedon et Kofoid) Taylor, 13 isolates of A. tamarense (Lebour) Balech, 2 isolates of A. affine (Fukuyo et Inoue) Balech, and single isolates of A. fundyense Balech, A. insuetum Balech, and A. pseudogonyaulax (Biecheler) Horiguchi ex Yuki et Fukuyo comb. nov. from Japan, Thailand, and the United States were amplified using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), sequenced, and subjected to phylogenetic analysis. The sequences ranged from 518 to 535 base pairs (bp) exclusive of the 18S and 28S rDNA coding regions. Sequence comparisons revealed seven divergent “ITS types” designated as follows: 1) catenella type, 2) tamarense type, 3) WKS-1 type, 4) Thai type, 5) affine type, 6) insuetum type, and 7) pseudogonyaulax type. Isolates of the tamarense type from various locations in Japan and the United States and of A. fundyense from the United States were closely related to each other and were clearly divergent from isolates of A. tamarense WKS-1 (WKS-I type) or A. tamarense CU-15 (Thai type). These latter two strains carried unique ITS types, although they were not distinguishable from isolates of the tamarense type by morphological criteria. Distance values between isolates of the tamarense type and the WKS-1 or Thai type were quite high (about 0.21 and 0.39, respectively). Seven isolates of A. catenella from Japan (catenella type) clearly diverged from the other ITS types already mentioned. Distance values between isolates of the catenella type were extremely low (<0.01), whereas distance values of ITS between the catenella type and the tamarense, WKS-1, or Thai type were 0.17, 0.18, and 0.40, respectively. Isolates of A. affine, A. insuetum, and A. pseudogonyaulax all carried unique ITS types. The ITSs of the tamarense type exhibited two distinct ITS sets, the “A gene” and the “B gene.” The two sequences occurred in a 1:1 ratio in PCR products. In contrast, the ITSs of all other isolates appeared homogeneous. Sequence comparisons also showed that the variations in the 3′ end of ITS1 (150-177 bp) were low within each ITS type but extremely high between ITS types. The number of different nucleotides among the seven Alexandrium types in this 28-bp region is more than 10. High diversity of this region may facilitate the design of DNA probes specific for each ITS type/species of Alexandrium.  相似文献   

15.
Paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) caused the deaths of four people in coastal area of Korea, mainly Jinhae-Masan Bay and adjacent areas, in April 1986 and in 1996. The PSP outbreaks were caused by the consumption of mussels, Mytilus edulis. The organism that caused PSP was identified, from morphological data only, as Alexandrium tamarense which is recently renamed as A. catenella, however recent studies have shown that the morphological diagnostic characteristics used to identify Alexandrium species have uncertainties and molecular tools and other criteria should be considered as well. The organism that caused past PSP outbreaks and incidents in Korea therefore need to be carefully reconsidered. The aim of this study was to re-evaluate the species really responsible for past outbreaks of PSP in Jinhae-Masan Bay, Korea. The temporal production and fluxes of the resting cysts of Alexandrium species were investigated for one year (from March 2011 to February 2012) using a sediment trap, and the morphology and phylogeny of vegetative cells germinated from the resting cysts were analysed. The production of Alexandrium species peaked in August and November, when temporal discrepancies were found in the water temperature (22.4 and 22.7 °C in August, 19.1 and 19.6 °C in November) and salinity (29.5 and 26.1 psu in August, 30.5 and 31.8 psu in November). The morphological data revealed that Alexandrium species germinated from resting cysts collected in August have a ventral pore on the 1′ plate, whereas the 1′ plate in Alexandrium species germinated from resting cysts collected in November lacks a ventral pore. Molecular phylogenetic data for the vegetative cells from the germination experiments allowed the August and November peaks to be assigned to Alexandrium catenella (Group I) and A. pacificum (Group IV), respectively. This indicates that the production of resting cysts of A. catenella can be enhanced by relatively high water temperature. This result is not consistent with those of previous studies that A. catenella responsible for PSP outbreaks was found at relatively low water temperature. In addition, large subunit ribosomal sequences data revealed that A. pacificum isolates from Korea were closely related to those from Australia, Japan and New Zealand where the PSP toxicity of shellfish and blooms occurred in the 1990s, indicating that the introduction of toxic dinoflagellates were related to ballast water from bulk-cargo shipping. Based on these results, we concluded that past PSP outbreaks in Jinhae-Masan Bay of Korea could have been caused by A. pacificum rather than by A. catenella.  相似文献   

16.
The 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and the subsequent huge tsunami greatly affected both human activity and the coastal marine ecosystem along the Pacific coast of Japan. The tsunami also reached Funka Bay in northern Japan and caused serious damage to the scallop cultures there, and this tsunami was believed to have affected the coastal environments in the bay. Therefore, we investigated the changes in the spatial abundance and distribution of the toxic dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense cysts before the tsunami (August 2010) and after the tsunami (May 2011, August 2011, May 2012 and August 2012) in the bay. Further, monthly sampling was conducted after the tsunami to identify seasonal changes of Alexandrium catenella/tamarense cysts and vegetative cells. Significant increases were observed in the populations of A. catenella/tamarense cysts, comparing the abundances before the tsunami (in August 2010; 70 ± 61 cysts g−1 wet sediment) to those just after it (in May 2011; 108 ± 84 cysts g−1 wet sediment), and both A. tamarense bloom (a maximum density was 1.3 × 103 cells L−1) and PSP (Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning) toxin contamination of scallops (9.4 mouse unit g−1 was recorded) occurred in the bay. Seasonal sampling also revealed that the encystment of A. tamarense and the supply of the cysts to bottom sediments did not occur in the bay from September to April. These results strongly suggested that the mixing of the bottom sediments by the tsunami caused the accumulation of the toxic A. tamarense cysts in the surface of bottom sediment through the process of redeposition in Funka Bay. Moreover, this cyst deposition may have contributed to the toxic bloom formation as a seed population in the spring of 2011.  相似文献   

17.
The Alexandrium tamarense species complex is a closely related cosmopolitan toxigenic group of morphology-based species, including A. tamarense, A. catenella and A. fundyense. This study investigated the morphology, internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequence and protein profile of A. tamarense and A. catenella grown in the same culture conditions using a combination of scanning electronic microscope (SEM), molecular and proteomic approaches. The results showed that all Alexandrium strains had the plate formula of Po, 4′, 6″, 6C, 8S, 5″′, 2″″. The ventral pore, a key conventional morphological feature to discriminate A. tamarense and A. catenella, was usually present in the first apical plate of ten A. tamarense strains, however, it was found to be absent in some cells of one Alexandrium strain, ATGX01. A. tamarense and A. catenella shared an identical ITS sequence with a minor variation at intraspecific level. Protein profiles of A. catenella DH01 and A. tamarense DH01, isolated from the same region of the East China Sea, showed no significant difference, the similarity of protein profiles of the two species reached 99% with a few proteins unique to one or the other. The present results suggest that the ventral pore is not a consistent morphological feature in the Alexandrium genus, and that A. tamarense and A. catenella are conspecific and should be redesignated to one species.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Blooms of Alexandrium spp. are a well-known phenomenon in Northern European waters. While A. tamarense/catenella, and A. pseudogonyaulax have been reported from marine waters, high densities of A. ostenfeldii are mainly observed at lower salinities in North Sea estuaries and the Baltic Sea, suggesting salinity as a driver of Alexandrium species composition and toxin distribution. To investigate this relationship, an oceanographic expedition through a natural salinity gradient was conducted in June 2016 along the coasts of Denmark. Besides hydrographic data, phytoplankton and sediment samples were collected for analyses of Alexandrium spp. cell and cyst abundances, for toxin measurement and cell isolation. Plankton data revealed the predominance of A. pseudogonyaulax at all transect stations while A. ostenfeldii and A. catenella generally contributed a minor fraction to the Alexandrium community. High abundances of A. pseudogonyaulax in the shallow enclosed Limfjord were accompanied by high amounts of goniodomin A (GDA). This toxin was also detected at low abundances along with A. pseudogonyaulax in the North Sea and the Kattegat. Genetic and morphological characterization of established strains showed high similarity of the Northern European population to distant geographic populations. Despite low cell abundances of A. ostenfeldii, different profiles of cycloimines were measured in the North Sea and in the Limfjord. This field survey revealed that salinity alone does not determine Alexandrium species and toxin distribution, but emphasizes the importance of habitat conditions such as proximity to seed banks, shelter, and high nutrient concentrations. The results show that A. pseudogonyaulax has become a prominent member of the Alexandrium spp. community over the past decade in the study area. Analyses of long term monitoring data from the Limfjord confirmed a recent shift to A. pseudogonyaulax dominance. Cyst and toxin records of the species in Kiel Bight suggest a spreading potential into the brackish Baltic Sea, which might lead to an expansion of blooms under future climate conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Takayama spp. are phototrophic dinoflagellates belonging to the family Kareniaceae and have caused fish kills in several countries. Understanding their trophic mode and interactions with co-occurring phytoplankton species are critical steps in comprehending their ecological roles in marine ecosystems, bloom dynamics, and dinoflagellate evolution. To investigate the trophic mode and interactions of Takayama spp., the ability of Takayama helix to feed on diverse algal species was examined, and the mechanisms of prey ingestion were determined. Furthermore, growth and ingestion rates of T. helix feeding on the dinoflagellates Alexandrium lusitanicum and Alexandrium tamarense, which are two optimal prey items, were determined as a function of prey concentration. T. helix ingested large dinoflagellates ≥15 μm in size, except for the dinoflagellates Karenia mikimotoi, Akashiwo sanguinea, and Prorocentrum micans (i.e., it fed on Alexandrium minutum, A. lusitanicum, A. tamarense, A. pacificum, A. insuetum, Cochlodinium polykrikoides, Coolia canariensis, Coolia malayensis, Gambierdiscus caribaeus, Gymnodinium aureolum, Gymnodinium catenatum, Gymnodinium instriatum, Heterocapsa triquetra, Lingulodinium polyedrum, and Scrippsiella trochoidea). All these edible prey items are dinoflagellates that have diverse eco-physiology such as toxic and non-toxic, single and chain forming, and planktonic and benthic forms. However, T. helix did not feed on small flagellates and dinoflagellates <13 μm in size (i.e., the prymnesiophyte Isochrysis galbana; the cryptophytes Teleaulax sp., Storeatula major, and Rhodomonas salina; the raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo; the dinoflagellates Heterocapsa rotundata, Amphidinium carterae, Prorocentrum minimum; or the small diatom Skeletonema costatum). T. helix ingested Heterocapsa triquetra by direct engulfment, but sucked materials from the rest of the edible prey species through the intercingular region of the sulcus. With increasing mean prey concentration, the specific growth rates of T. helix on A. lusitanicum and A. tamarense increased continuously before saturating at prey concentrations of 336–620 ng C mL−1. The maximum specific growth rates (mixotrophic growth) of T. helix on A. lusitanicum and A. tamarense were 0.272 and 0.268 d−1, respectively, at 20 °C under a 14:10 h light/dark cycle of 20 μE m−2 s−1 illumination, while its growth rates (phototrophic growth) under the same light conditions without added prey were 0.152 and 0.094 d−1, respectively. The maximum ingestion rates of T. helix on A. lusitanicum and A. tamarense were 1.23 and 0.48 ng C predator−1d−1, respectively. The results of the present study suggest that T. helix is a mixotrophic dinoflagellate that is able to feed on a diverse range of toxic species and, thus, its mixotrophic ability should be considered when studying red tide dynamics, food webs, and dinoflagellate evolution.  相似文献   

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