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Alexandrium and Scrippsiella cyst viability and cytoplasmic fullness in a 60-cm sediment core from Sequim Bay,WA
Affiliation:1. Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106, USA;2. Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106, USA;3. Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Seattle, WA, 98112, USA;4. Environmental and Fisheries Science Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Seattle, WA, 98112, USA
Abstract:Many marine protists produce a benthic resting stage during their life history. This non-motile cyst stage can either germinate near the sediment surface to provide the inoculum for subsequent blooms or, be buried by sediment deposits over time and entrained into the sedimentary record. Buried cysts can be resuspended into the water column by mixing events (e.g., storms) or other disturbances (e.g., dredging). It is not clear how long cysts can survive while buried in the sediments and still be capable of germinating given favorable conditions. Here, the germination success of cysts produced by the potentially toxic dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium and the non-toxic dinoflagellate genus Scrippsiella is reported from a 60-cm sediment core collected in Sequim Bay, WA, in December 2011. Cysts of Alexandrium spp. and Scrippsiella spp. were isolated from 2-cm sections of the core, placed in individual wells of a 96-well plate with growth medium, imaged, incubated at favorable conditions and monitored for germination. An image analysis program, DinoCyst, was used to quantitatively measure the amount of granular storage products, presumed energy stores, inside the cytoplasm to test the hypothesis that older cysts located deeper in the sediment core will have fewer energy stores available and will be less likely to germinate. An index of the area of the cytoplasm occupied with granular storage products relative to cyst size, termed ‘cytoplasmic fullness’, and age, based on 210Pb dating of surrounding sediments, was compared with germination success or failure. This research indicates that cysts of Alexandrium spp. and Scrippsiella spp. can remain viable in sediments for 60 years or longer, show little visual evidence of cytoplasmic deterioration over this timescale (as measured by cytoplasmic fullness), and that germination success is statistically similar for cysts isolated from 0–60 cm deep in the sediment core. These results suggest that a cyst's cytoplasmic fullness is not indicative of viability and that cysts located as deep as 60 cm in the sediments are as likely to germinate as surface cysts given favorable conditions.
Keywords:Dinoflagellate cysts  Germination success  Viability  Resuspension  FSW"  },{"  #name"  :"  keyword"  ,"  $"  :{"  id"  :"  kw0040"  },"  $$"  :[{"  #name"  :"  text"  ,"  _"  :"  filtered sea water  HAB"  },{"  #name"  :"  keyword"  ,"  $"  :{"  id"  :"  kw0050"  },"  $$"  :[{"  #name"  :"  text"  ,"  _"  :"  harmful algal bloom  PSP"  },{"  #name"  :"  keyword"  ,"  $"  :{"  id"  :"  kw0060"  },"  $$"  :[{"  #name"  :"  text"  ,"  _"  :"  paralytic shellfish poisoning  SD"  },{"  #name"  :"  keyword"  ,"  $"  :{"  id"  :"  kw0070"  },"  $$"  :[{"  #name"  :"  text"  ,"  _"  :"  standard deviation  SPT"  },{"  #name"  :"  keyword"  ,"  $"  :{"  id"  :"  kw0080"  },"  $$"  :[{"  #name"  :"  text"  ,"  _"  :"  sodium polytungstate
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