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1.
In Japan, the bloom seasons of two toxic species, namely, Alexandrium catenella (Whedon et Kof.) Balech and Alexandrium tamiyavanichii Balech, sometimes overlap with those of three nontoxic Alexandrium species, namely, Alexandrium affine (H. Inouye et Fukuyo) Balech, Alexandrium fraterculus (Balech) Balech, and Alexandrium pseudogoniaulax (Biecheler) T. Horig. ex Y. Kita et Fukuyo. In this study, a multiplex PCR assay has been developed that enables simultaneous detection of six Alexandrium species on the basis of differences in the lengths of the PCR products. The accuracy of the multiplex PCR system was assessed using 101 DNA templates of the six target Alexandrium species and 27 DNA templates of 11 nontarget species (128 DNA templates in total). All amplicons obtained from the 101 DNA templates of the target species were appropriately identified, whereas all 27 DNA templates of the nontarget species were not amplified. Species‐specific identification by the multiplex PCR assay was certainly possible from single cells of the target species.  相似文献   

2.
The dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense (Lebor) Balech and Alexandrium catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Balech (Dinophyceae) are believed to be the main species responsible for paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) all over the world. It is necessary to identify A. tamarense and A. catenella cysts and to monitor their distribution in sediment in order to minimize the damages caused by PSP to the economy and food quality because cysts are the seed population for blooms caused by motile vegetative cells. In this study, we developed an efficient DNA extraction method from the natural cysts present in marine sediments after they were size fractionated with a plankton net (mesh size of 20–150 μm). The 10–3000 cysts were added to the sediments collected from the Ariake Sea, and for which the primuline-staining method did not reveal any cysts. DNA was then extracted from each sample, and linear standard curves for A. tamarense and A. catenella cysts were obtained from the correlation between the Ct values by real-time PCR and the log of the initial densities of cysts. We monitored the A. tamarense and A. catenella cyst densities in the environmental samples. This assay was demonstrated to be a powerful tool for the identification, detection, and quantification of the cysts of the toxic dinoflagellates.  相似文献   

3.
Alexandrium catenella (Whedon et Kof.) Balech, A. tamarense (M. Lebour) Balech, and A. fundyense Balech comprise the A. tamarense complex, dinoflagellates responsible for paralytic shellfish poisoning worldwide. The relationships among these morphologically defined species are poorly understood, as are the reasons for increases in range and bloom occurrence observed over several decades. This study combines existing data with new ribosomal DNA sequences from strains originating from the six temperate continents to reconstruct the biogeography of the complex and explore the origins of new populations. The morphospecies are examined under the criteria of phylogenetic, biological, and morphological species concepts and do not to satisfy the requirements of any definition. It is recommended that use of the morphospecies appellations within this complex be discontinued as they imply erroneous relationships among morphological variants. Instead, five groups (probably cryptic species) are identified within the complex that are supported on the basis of large genetic distances, 100% bootstrap values, toxicity, and mating compatibility. Every isolate of three of the groups that has been tested is nontoxic, whereas every isolate of the remaining two groups is toxic. These phylogenetic groups were previously identified within the A. tamarense complex and given geographic designations that reflected the origins of known isolates. For at least two groups, the geographically based names are not indicative of the range occupied by members of each group. Therefore, we recommend a simple group‐numbering scheme for use until the taxonomy of this group is reevaluated and new species are proposed.  相似文献   

4.
Bioluminescence is reported in members of 18 dinoflagellate genera. Species of dinoflagellates are known to have different bioluminescent signatures, making it difficult to assess the presence of particular species in the water column using optical tools, particularly when bioluminescent populations are in nonbloom conditions. A “universal” oligonucleotide primer set, along with species and genus‐specific primers specific to the luciferase gene were developed for the detection of bioluminescent dinoflagellates. These primers amplified luciferase sequences from bioluminescent dinoflagellate cultures and from environmental samples containing bioluminescent dinoflagellate populations. Novel luciferase sequences were obtained for strains of Alexandrium cf. catenella (Whedon et Kof.) Balech and Alexandrium fundyense Balech, and also from a strain of Gonyaulax spinifera (Clap. et Whitting) Diesing, which produces bioluminescence undetectable to the naked eye. The phylogeny of partial luciferase sequences revealed five significant clades of the dinoflagellate luciferase gene, suggesting divergence among some species and providing clues on their molecular evolution. We propose that the primers developed in this study will allow further detection of low‐light‐emitting bioluminescent dinoflagellate species and will have applications as robust indicators of dinoflagellate bioluminescence in natural water samples.  相似文献   

5.
To reconsider whether toxin profile could be used as a marker for populations from different geographical areas, clonal isolates of the toxic dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech and Alexandrium catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech from Ofunato Bay (Iwate Prefecture), Atsumi Bay (Aichi Prefecture), Tanabe Bay (Wakayama Prefecture), Harima‐Nada (Kagawa Prefecture), Uranouchi Bay (Kochi Prefecture), Hiroshima Bay (Hiroshima Prefecture) and Yamakawa Bay (Kagoshima Prefecture), which were identified on the basis of morphotaxonomy, immunological and molecular biological techniques, were subjected to analysis of paralytic shellfish poisoning toxins by high performance liquid chromatography‐fluorometric method. All the isolates except A. tamarense OF152 from Ofunato Bay contained mainly N‐sulfocarbamoyl toxins (C1 +2) with various amounts of derivatives, and a typical north‐to‐south trend of decreasing toxicity was observed. In both A. tamarense and A. catenella, toxin profiles were rather constant within a geographical area and divergent among different geographical areas. The toxin profiles of A. tamarense from Harima‐Nada were well conserved among different bloom years. Toxin profile showed that isolates of A. tamarense from Ofunato Bay, A. tamarense from Harima‐Nada isolated in 1988 and A. catenella from Uranouchi Bay were heterogeneous. However, only two or three groups of isolates with different toxin profiles were observed in a geographical region, suggesting that several representative isolates express the genotype in a given region. These observations confirmed that toxin composition could be used as a marker to discriminate different geographical populations of these species.  相似文献   

6.
In a previous study large-subunit ribosomal RNA gene (LSU rDNA) sequences from the marine dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech, A. catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech, A. fundyense Balech, A. affine (Fukuyo et Inoue) Balech, A. minutum Halim, A. lusitanicum Balech, and A. andersoni Balech were compared to assess inter- and intraspecific relationships. Many cultures compared in that study contained more than one class of LSU rDNA. Sequencing pooled clones of rDNA from single cultures revealed length heterogeneities and sequence ambiguities. This complicated sequence comparisons because multiple rDNA clones from a single culture had to be sequenced individually to document the different classes of molecules present in that culture. A further complication remained as to whether or not the observed intraculture sequence variations were reliable genetic markers or were instead artifacts of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification, cloning, and/or sequencing methods employed. The goals of the present study were to test the accuracy of Alexandrium LSU rDNA sequences using restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis and to devise RFLP-based assays for discriminating among representatives of that group. Computer-assisted examination of the sequences allowed us to identify a set of restriction enzymes that were predicted to reveal species, strain, and intraculture LSU rDNA heterogeneities. All groups identified by sequencing were revealed independently and repeatedly by RFLP analysis of PCR-amplified material. Five ambiguities and one length heterogeneity, each of which ascribes a unique group of Alexandrium species or strains, were confirmed by restriction digests. Observed intraculture LSU rDNA heterogeneities were not artifacts of cloning and sequencing but were instead a good representation of the spectrum of molecules amplified during PCR reactions. Intraculture LSU rDNA heterogeneities thus serve as unique genetic markers for particular strains of Alexandrium, particularly those of A. tamarense, A. catenella, and A. fundyense. However, some of these “signature heterogeneities” represented a smaller portion of PCR product than was expected given acquired sequences. Other deviations from predicted RFLP patterns included incomplete digestions and appearance of spurious products. These observations indicate that the diversity of sequences in PCR product pools were greater than that observed by cloning and sequencing. The RFLP tests described here are useful tools for characterizing Alexandrium LSU rDNA to define the evolutionary lineage of cultures and are applicable at a fraction of the time, cost, and labor required for sequencing.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The dinoflagellates contain diverse plastids of uncertain origin. To determine the origin of the peridinin‐ and fucoxanthin‐containing dinoflagellate plastid, we sequenced the plastid‐encoded psaA, psbA, and rbcL genes from various red and dinoflagellate algae. The psbA gene phylogeny, which was made from a dataset of 15 dinoflagellates, 22 rhodophytes, five cryptophytes, seven haptophytes, seven stramenopiles, two chlorophytes, and a glaucophyte as the outgroup, supports monophyly of the peridinin‐, and fucoxanthin‐containing dinoflagellates, as a sister group to the haptophytes. The monophyletic relationship with the haptophytes is recovered in the psbA + psaA phylogeny, with stronger support. The rubisco tree utilized the ‘Form I’ red algal type of rbcL and included fucoxanthin‐containing dinoflagellates. The dinoflagellate + haptophyte sister relationship is also recovered in this analysis. Peridinium foliaceum is shown to group with the diatoms in all the phylogenies. Based on our analyses of plastid sequences, we postulate that: (1) the plastid of peridinin‐, and fucoxanthin‐containing dinoflagellates originated from a common ancestor; (2) the ancestral dinoflagellate acquired its plastid from a haptophyte though a tertiary plastid replacement; (3) ‘Form II’ rubisco replaced the ancestral rbcL after the divergence of the peridinin‐, and fucoxanthin‐containing dinoflagellates; and (4) we confirm that the plastid of P. foliaceum originated from a Stramenopiles endosymbiont.  相似文献   

9.
Fluorescent DNA probes (cCAT-F1 and cTAM-Fl) complementary to the 3′ end of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) internal transcribed spacer 1 sequences (ITS 1: positions 154–176) of toxic species of Alexandrium catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Taylor and A. tamarense (Lebour) Taylor were applied to various cultures of the genus Alexandrium and several other phytoplankters using whole-cell fluorescent in situ hybridization. cCAT-F1 and cTAM-F1 reacted with targeted strains of A. catenella (catenella type) and A. tamarense (tamarense type), respectively, and did not react with isolates of A. affine (Inoue et Fukuyo) Balech, A. fraterculus (Balech) Balech, A. insuetum Balech, A. lusitanicum Balech, A. pseudogonyaulux (Biecheler)Horiguchi ex Yuki et Fukuyo comb. nov., nor isolates of Prorocentrum micans Ehrenberg, Amphidinium carterae Hulburt, Heterocapsa triquetra (Ehrenberg) Stein, Gymnodinium mikimotoi Miyake et Kominami ex Oda, Skeletonema costatum (Greville) Cleve, Heterosigma akashiwo (Hada) Hada, and Chattonella antiqua (Hada) Ono. DNase I and RNase A treatment showed that probes hybridized to ribosomal DNA, not rRNA. Probes were localized at the bottom of the U-shaped nucleus, a region that corresponds to the nucleolus. The probes are highly specific for particular strains of A. catenella and A. tamarense and are applicable for identifying these species collected from cultured and possibly natural populations.  相似文献   

10.
We examined the sterol profile of Karlodinium veneficum (D. Ballant.) J. Larsen, Akashiwo sanguinea (Hiraska) Ge. Hansen et Moestrup, Alexandrium tamarense (M. Lebour) Balech, Alexandrium affine (H. Inoue et Fukuyo) Balech, Gonyaulax polygramma F. Stein, and Gymnodinium instriatum (Freud. et J. J. Lee) Coats, along with their Amoebophyra parasites. There were no consistent sterol profiles that characterized the genus Amoebophyra. Instead, in five out of six comparisons, the host and parasite sterol profiles where highly correlated. The one exception, Amoebophyra sp. ex Alex. tamarense, was least like its host in sterol profile and also possessed the widest host range for infection. There was little correlation between host and parasite in fatty acid profiles, with the parasite being deficient in fatty acids characteristic of the plastid [e.g., 18:5(n‐3) associated with galactolipids of the thylakoids, as previously published by Adolf et al. (2007)]. Those hosts and parasites with sterol profiles dominated by desmethyl sterols were most sensitive to karlotoxin toxicity. In the host‐parasite pairs most sensitive to karlotoxin addition, recovery of the intact karlotoxin molecule was poorest. Given the sensitivity to karlotoxin, some species of Amoebophyra may avoid infection of K. veneficum.  相似文献   

11.
There are at least 40,000 species of microalgae in the aquatic environment. Fifteen species of marine dinoflagellates and freshwater cyanobacteria are known to produce paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) and represent a threat to human and/or livestock health. Although known toxic species are regularly monitored, the wider cross‐section of microalgae has not been systematically tested for PSTs. Advances in rapid screening techniques have resulted in the development of highly sensitive and specific methods to detect PSTs, including the sodium channel and saxiphilin binding assays. These assays were used in this study in 96‐well formats to screen 234 highly diverse isolates of Australian freshwater and marine microalgae for PSTs. The screening assays detected five toxic species, representing one freshwater cyanobacterium (Anabaena circinalis Rabenhorst) and four species of marine dinoflagellates (Alexandrium minutum Halim, A. catenella Balech, A. tamarense Balech, and Gymnodinium catenatum Graham). Liquid chromatography‐fluorescence detection was used to identify 14 saxitoxin analogues across the five species, and each species exhibited distinct toxin profiles. These results indicate that PST production is restricted to a narrow range of microalgal species found in Australian waters.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The dinoflagellate Gymnodinium mikimotoi Miyake et Kominami ex Oda possesses an anomalously pigmented plastid which contains 19′‐hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin, 19′‐butanoyloxyfucoxanthin and fucoxanthin instead of peridinin as the major carotenoids. Previously, we have shown that the plastid of G. mikimotoi belongs to the rhodoplast lineage as inferred from phylogenetic analyses based on the amino acid sequences deduced from psbA and psaA and the nucleotide sequence of the plastid small subunit ribosomal RNA. Furthermore, in the present study, we cloned and sequenced an additional representative plastid gene, rbcL, encoding the large subunit of ribulose 1–5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO LSU) from G. mikimotoi. The amino acid sequence deduced from the rbcL gene of G. mikimotoi apparently revealed the conventional form I RuBisCO LSU, which is present in most photosynthetic organisms, and not the divergent form II existing in typically pigmented dinofl age Nates with plastids containing peridinin as the main carotenoid. This finding supports the hypothesis that the origins of the plastids in G. mikimotoi and peridinin‐type dinoflagellates are not related to each other. Molecular phylogenetic analysis based on the amino acid sequence deduced from the rbcL gene further showed that the plastid of G. mikimotoi belongs to the rhodoplast lineage. In particular, G. mikimotoi clustered with haptophytes in the phylogenetic tree. From this result, two hypotheses with respect to the origin of the plastid in G. mikimotoi can be proposed: G. mikimotoi may have engulfed a haptophyte‐like cell (tertiary symbiosis) or englulfed a rhodophyte‐like cell that was closely related to the origin of the plastid in the haptophyte (secondary symbiosis).  相似文献   

14.
The toxic marine dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense (Lebor) Balech and A. catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Taylor have been mainly responsible for paralytic shellfish poisoning in Japan. Rapid and precise identification of these algae has been difficult because this genus contains many morphologically similar toxic and nontoxic species. Here, we report a rapid, precise, and quantitative identification method using three fluorescent, rRNA‐targeted, oligonucleotide probes for A. tamarense (Atm1), A. catenella (Act1), and the nontoxic A. affine (Inoue et Fukuyo; Aaf1). Each probe was species specific when applied using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). None of the probes reacted with three other Alexandrium spp., A. lusitanicum Balech, A. ostenfeldii (Paulsen) Balech & Tangen, and A. insuetum Balech, or with eight other microalgae, including Gymnodinium mikimotoi Miyake et Kominami ex Oda and Heterosigma akashiwo (Hada) Hara et Chihara, suggesting that the species specificity of each probe was very high. Cells labeled with fluorescein 5‐isothiocyanate–conjugated probes showed strong green fluorescence throughout the whole cell except for the nucleus. FISH could be completed within 1 h and largely eliminated the need for identifying species based on key morphological criteria. More than 80% of targeted cells of both species could be identified by microscopy and quantified during growth up to the early stationary phase; more than 70% of cells could be detected in the late stationary phase. The established FISH protocol was found to be a specific, rapid, precise, and quantitative method that might prove to be a useful tool to distinguish and quantify Alexandrium cells collected from Japanese coastal waters.  相似文献   

15.
The marine toxic dinoflagellates Alexandrium tamarense (Lebor) Balech and A. catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Taylor that cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) are identified on the basis of morphological features in routine monitoring. Rapid and simple identification is, however, often difficult because of the morphological similarity. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) using ribosomal RNA (rRNA)-targeted probes has been studied as a method of easily identifying and enumerating species responsible for harmful algal blooms (HABs). Its application to monitoring natural populations of HAB species, however, is limited. Here, we applied the FISH method to identify and enumerate cells of A. tamarense and A. catenella in natural plankton assemblages collected from Japanese coastal waters. A. tamarense-specific (Atm1) and A. catenella-specific (Act1) probes were established based on the D2 region of the large-subunit ribosomal RNA gene (28S rDNA). With these two probes, natural cells of A. tamarense or A. catenella in field samples could easily be identified when the following three conditions were met. First, cells should be concentrated by filtration, not centrifugation, in order to avoid the loss of cells. Second, autofluorescence should be minimized; acetone was an effective decolorization reagent. Third, samples should be stored at −20 or −80 °C for long-term preservation. The results indicate that FISH is a useful tool for the rapid identification of toxic Alexandrium spp. and can facilitate the analysis of numerous natural samples.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
We cloned and sequenced three plastid-encoded genes, psbA (encoding D1 protein), psaA (encoding P700 chlorophyll a apoprotein) and the small-subunit ribo-somal RNA (pl-SSU rRNA) from an anomalously pigmented dinoflagellate, Gymnodinium mikimotoi Miyake et Kominami ex Oda, with a plastid containing 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin, 19′-butanoyloxyfucoxanthin and fucoxanthin instead of peridinin as the major carot-enoids. Molecular phylogenetic trees based on the deduced amino acid sequences of D1 and P700 chlorophyll a apoprotein and nucleotide sequence of pl-SSU rRNA were then constructed separately. In the D1 tree, G. mikimotoi and typically pigmented dinofl age Nates harboring a peridinin type plastid were monophyletic and G. mikimotoi was positioned most basally within the dinoflagellate lineage. The dinoflagellate lineage was the sister group of heterokonts and the dinoflagellates/heterokonts lineage was clustered with the rhodophytes/cryptophyte lineage. In the P700 chlorophyll a apoprotein phylogenetic tree, G. mikimotoi was clustered with a rhodo-phyte, a cryptophyte and a heterokont. In the pl-SSU rRNA tree, G. mikimotoi and haptophytes constituted a monophyletic group associated with rhodophytes and heterokonts. These results, derived from the three phylogenetic analyses, support the hypothesis that the plastid of G. mikimotoi belongs to the rhodoplast lineage. Although we have previously demonstrated that D1 from peridinin type dinofl age Nates lacks a ‘C-terminus extension’ (which should be removed by proteolytic cleavage from the D1 precursor), the D1 from G. mikimotoi revealed a C-terminus extension that is different from those of other photosynthetic organisms with respect to the length of the amino acid residues.  相似文献   

18.
A PCR (polymerase chain reaction)-based assay for the detection of Alexandrium species in cultured samples using rDNA-targeted probes was developed. The internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2 (ITS1 and ITS2) and the 5.8S ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) from cultured isolates of A. tamarense (Lebour) Taylor, A. catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech, A. fundyense Balech and A. lusitanicum Balech were amplified using PCR and sequenced. Sequence comparisons showed that the 5.8S and ITS1-ITS2 regions contain sequences specific for the Alexandrium genus, especially at the 3' end of the 5.8S coding region. PCR primers and a radioactive 32P-labeled DNA probe were devised for this region. The cross-reactivity of the PCR primers and probe was tested against cultured isolates of Alexandrium and other dinoflagellates and diatoms. All the Alexandrium isolates screened reacted toward the genus-specific probe; in contrast, the other groups of microalgae (dinoflagellates and diatoms) did not react with the probe. Furthermore, the PCR amplification technique combined with the use of the rDNA-target probe allowed us to develop a method for the detection of Alexandrium cells in cultured samples. This PCR method might offer a new approach for the identification and enumeration of the HAB (harmful algal bloom) species present in natural phytoplankton populations.  相似文献   

19.
Field observations and results from previous laboratory studies on the effects of turbulence on dinoflagellates have led to a paradigm in phytoplankton ecology that dinoflagellate growth is negatively affected by turbulence. To test the paradigm, 10 species of autotrophic dinoflagellates were exposed to quantified three‐dimensional turbulence generated by vertically oscillating cylindrical rods in 20‐L rectangular culture tanks. Turbulence was quantified in the tanks (as the turbulent energy dissipation rate, ε ) using an acoustic Doppler velocimeter. Dinoflagellates were exposed to two turbulence treatments: high turbulence ( ε ~ 10 ? 4 m2·s ? 3), low turbulence ( ε ~ 10 ? 8 m2·s ? 3), and an unstirred control. In accord with the paradigm, Ceratium fusus (Ehrenberg) Dujardin had lower net growth rates in high turbulence, whereas Pyrocystis noctiluca Murray ex Haeckel and Ceratium tripos (O. F. Müller) Nitzsch did not increase their numbers in high turbulence. However, Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech, Pyrocystis fusiformis Wyville‐Thomson ex Murray, Alexandrium catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Balech, and a Gyrodinium sp. Kofoid and Swezy were apparently unaffected by turbulence and had the same net growth rates across all turbulence treatments. Contradicting the paradigm, Lingulodinium polyedrum (Stein) Dodge (= Gonyaulax polyedra), Gymnodinium catenatum Graham, and Alexandrium fundyense Balech had increased net growth rates in high turbulence treatments. Cross‐sectional area (CSA) varied little across turbulence treatments for 8 of 10 dinoflagellate species tested, CSA in C. fusus increased when net growth rate decreased in high turbulence, and, conversely, CSA decreased in L. polyedrum when net growth rate increased in high turbulence.  相似文献   

20.
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