journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331540/the-human-health-effects-of-harmful-algal-blooms-in-florida-the-importance-of-high-resolution-data
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew Bechard, Corey Lang
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) have been found to cause increases in healthcare visits for a variety of illnesses to humans if exposure and contact is sufficient. We use a more comprehensive dataset than previously implemented in prior literature to better isolate visits by healthcare facility type and proximity to bloom. Using a difference-in-differences model, our results suggest HABs cause an increase of 23.67 healthcare admissions per zip code per month across four HAB-related diagnoses. This impact is a 3,000% increase over baseline non-bloom times and an increase in monthly healthcare costs of about $250,000 for the entire impacted area...
February 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331539/comparative-genomic-analysis-of-microcystis-strain-diversity-using-conserved-marker-genes
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E Anders Kiledal, Laura A Reitz, Esmée Q Kuiper, Jacob Evans, Ruqaiya Siddiqui, Vincent J Denef, Gregory J Dick
Microcystis-dominated cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cyanoHABs) have a global impact on freshwater environments, affecting both wildlife and human health. Microcystis diversity and function in field samples and laboratory cultures can be determined by sequencing whole genomes of cultured isolates or natural populations, but these methods remain computationally and financially expensive. Amplicon sequencing of marker genes is a lower cost and higher throughput alternative to characterize strain composition and diversity in mixed samples...
February 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331538/pelagic-sargassum-in-the-gulf-of-mexico-driven-by-ocean-currents-and-eddies
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yingjun Zhang, Chuanmin Hu, Dennis J McGillicuddy, Brian B Barnes, Yonggang Liu, Vassiliki H Kourafalou, Shuai Zhang, Frank J Hernandez
Pelagic Sargassum in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) plays an important role in ocean biology and ecology, yet our knowledge of its origins and transport pathways is limited. Here, using satellite observations of Sargassum areal density and ocean surface currents between 2000 and 2023, we show that large amounts of Sargassum in the GoM can either originate from the northwestern GoM or be a result of physical transport from the northwestern Caribbean Sea, both with specific transport pathways. Sargassum of the northwestern GoM can be transported to the eastern GoM by ocean currents and eddies, eventually entering the Sargasso Sea...
February 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331537/effects-of-culture-conditions-on-the-growth-of-the-benthic-dinoflagellates-ostreopsis-cf-ovata-prorocentrum-lima-and-coolia-malayensis-dinophyceae-a-global-review
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra Grigoriyan, Maria Lucia Lorini, Marcos de Souza Lima Figueiredo, Eliliane Vasconcelos Corrêa Almada, Silvia M Nascimento
Benthic dinoflagellates produce potent toxins that may negatively affect humans and the marine biota. Understanding the factors that stimulate their growth is important for management strategies and to reduce their potential negative impacts. Laboratory cultures have been extensively used to study microalgae physiology and characterize life cycles, nutrition, growth rates, among other processes. A systematic review of the literature on the growth parameters of the benthic dinoflagellates Ostreopsis cf. ovata, Prorocentrum lima species complex and Coolia malayensis obtained in laboratory cultures of strains isolated from all over the world was performed...
February 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331536/the-influence-of-the-toxin-producing-dinoflagellate-alexandrium-catenella-on-feeding-reproduction-and-toxin-retention-in-calanus-helgolandicus
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ali H Abdulhussain, Kathryn B Cook, Eileen Bresnan, Jean-Pierre Lacaze, Daniel J Mayor
Copepods of the genus Calanus dominate the biomass of pelagic ecosystems from the Mediterranean Sea up into the Arctic Ocean and form an important link between phytoplankton and higher trophic levels. Impacts from toxin-producing harmful algae (HA) have been recorded throughout this region over the last 50 years, with potentially negative effects on Calanus spp. populations and the ecosystem functions and services they provide. Here we examine how ingestion, egg-production and egg-viability in Calanus helgolandicus are affected by the relative abundance of the toxin-producing dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella in their diet...
February 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212088/toxic-dinoflagellate-centrodinium-punctatum-cleve-f-j-r-taylor-an-examination-on-the-responses-in-growth-and-toxin-contents-to-drastic-changes-of-temperature-and-salinity
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hyeon Ho Shin, Zhun Li, Damien Réveillon, Véronique Savar, Philipp Hess, Kenneth Neil Mertens, Joo Yeon Youn, Kyoungsoon Shin, Jihoon Lee, A-Young Shin, Eunjung Byun, Yeong Du Yoo, Moon Ho Son, Minji Lee, Min Ho Seo
To understand environmental effects affecting paralytic shellfish toxin production of Centrodinium punctatum, this study examined the growth responses, and toxin contents and profiles of a C. punctatum culture exposed to drastic changes of temperature (5-30 °C) and salinity (15-40). C. punctatum grew over a temperature range of 15-25 °C, with an optimum of 20 °C., and over a salinity range of 25-40, with optimum salinities of 30-35. This suggests that C. punctatum prefers relatively warm waters and an oceanic habitat for its growth and can adapt to significant changes of salinity levels...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212087/gambierdiscus-species-diversity-and-community-structure-in-st-thomas-usvi-and-the-florida-keys-usa
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mindy L Richlen, Kali Horn, Victoria Uva, Evangeline Fachon, Sarah L Heidmann, Tyler B Smith, Michael L Parsons, Donald M Anderson
Ciguatera Poisoning (CP) is a widespread and complex poisoning syndrome caused by the consumption of fish or invertebrates contaminated with a suite of potent neurotoxins collectively known as ciguatoxins (CTXs), which are produced by certain benthic dinoflagellates species in the genera Gambierdiscus and Fukuyoa. Due to the complex nature of this HAB problem, along with a poor understanding of toxin production and entry in the coral reef food web, the development of monitoring, management, and forecasting approaches for CP has lagged behind those available for other HAB syndromes...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212086/ciguamod-i-a-conceptual-model-of-ciguatoxin-loading-in-the-greater-caribbean-region
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael L Parsons, Mindy L Richlen, Tyler B Smith, Donald M Anderson, Ashley L Abram, Deana L Erdner, Alison Robertson
Ciguatera poisoning (CP) is the most common form of phycotoxin-borne seafood poisoning globally, affecting thousands of people on an annual basis. It most commonly occurs in residential fish of coral reefs, which consume toxin-laden algae, detritus, and reef animals. The class of toxins that cause CP, ciguatoxins (CTXs), originate in benthic, epiphytic dinoflagellates of the genera, Gambierdiscus and Fukuyoa, which are consumed by herbivores and detritivores that facilitate food web transfer. A number of factors have hindered adequate environmental monitoring and seafood surveillance for ciguatera including the low concentrations in which the toxins are found in seafood causing illness (sub-ppb), a lack of knowledge on the toxicity equivalence of other CTXs and contribution of other benthic algal toxins to the disease, and the limited availability of quantified toxin standards and reference materials...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212085/a-paleoecological-investigation-of-recent-cyanobacterial-blooms-and-their-drivers-in-two-contrasting-lakes
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caitlin Wheeler, John K Pearman, Jamie D Howarth, Marcus J Vandergoes, Katherine Holt, Steven A Trewick, Xun Li, Lucy Thompson, Georgia Thomson-Laing, Mailys Picard, Chris Moy, Nicholas P Mckay, Adelaine Moody, Claire Shepherd, Valerie van den Bos, Konstanze Steiner, Susanna A Wood
Cyanobacterial blooms are one of the most significant threats to global water security and freshwater biodiversity. Interactions among multiple stressors, including habitat degradation, species invasions, increased nutrient runoff, and climate change, are key drivers. However, assessing the role of anthropogenic activity on the onset of cyanobacterial blooms and exploring response variation amongst lakes of varying size and depth is usually limited by lack of historical records. In the present study we applied molecular, paleolimnological (trace metal, Itrax-µ-XRF and hyperspectral scanning, chronology), paleobotanical (pollen) and historical data to reconstruct cyanobacterial abundance and community composition and anthropogenic impacts in two dune lakes over a period of up to 1200 years...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212084/marine-phycotoxin-levels-in-shellfish-14-years-of-data-gathered-along-the-italian-coast
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefano Accoroni, Monica Cangini, Roberto Angeletti, Carmen Losasso, Simone Bacchiocchi, Antonella Costa, Aurelia Di Taranto, Laura Escalera, Giorgio Fedrizzi, Angela Garzia, Francesca Longo, Andrea Macaluso, Nunzia Melchiorre, Anna Milandri, Stefania Milandri, Marina Montresor, Francesca Neri, Arianna Piersanti, Silva Rubini, Chiara Suraci, Francesca Susini, Maria Rosaria Vadrucci, Alessandro Graziano Mudadu, Barbara Vivaldi, Barbara Soro, Cecilia Totti, Adriana Zingone
Along the Italian coasts, toxins of algal origin in wild and cultivated shellfish have been reported since the 1970s. In this study, we used data gathered by the Veterinary Public Health Institutes (IZS) and the Italian Environmental Health Protection Agencies (ARPA) from 2006 to 2019 to investigate toxicity events along the Italian coasts and relate them to the distribution of potentially toxic species. Among the detected toxins (OA and analogs, YTXs, PTXs, STXs, DAs, AZAs), OA and YTX were those most frequently reported...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212083/division-time-t-d-for-in-situ-growth-measurements-demonstrates-thermal-ecotypes-of-karlodinium-veneficum
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erik L J E Broemsen, Allen R Place, Matthew W Parrow
The toxic dinoflagellate Karlodinium veneficum forms fish killing blooms in temperate estuaries worldwide. These blooms have variable toxicity which may be related to bloom stage and in situ growth rates of the constituent K. veneficum cells. Measurement of in situ growth rates is challenging and methods such as the mitotic index technique require knowledge of the dynamics of cell division. In order to better understand these dynamics, we determined the duration of cell division (td ) in four geographically distinct laboratory strains of K...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212082/constructed-wetland-mesocosms-improve-the-biodegradation-of-microcystin-lr-and-cylindrospermopsin-by-indigenous-bacterial-consortia
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lasse Ahrenkiel Thyssen, Alba Martinez I Quer, Carlos Alberto Arias, Lea Ellegaard-Jensen, Pedro N Carvalho, Anders Johansen
Cyanobacterial blooms releasing harmful cyanotoxins, such as microcystin (MC) and cylindrospermopsin (CYN), are prominent threats to human and animal health. Constructed wetlands (CW) may be a nature-based solution for bioremediation of lake surface water containing cyanotoxins, due to its low-cost requirement of infrastructure and environmentally friendly operation. There is recent evidence that microcystin-LR (MC-LR) can efficiently be removed in CW microcosms where CYN degradation in CW is unknown. Likewise, the mechanistic background regarding cyanotoxins transformation in CW is not yet elucidated...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212081/two-duckweed-species-exhibit-variable-tolerance-to-microcystin-lr-exposure-across-genotypic-lineages
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lacey D Rzodkiewicz, Martin M Turcotte
Cyanotoxins produced by harmful cyanobacteria blooms can damage freshwater ecosystems and threaten human health. Floating macrophytes may be used as a means of biocontrol by limiting light and resources available to cyanobacteria. However, genetic variation in macrophyte sensitivity to cyanotoxins could influence their suitability as biocontrol agents. We investigated the influence of such intraspecific variation on the response of two rapidly growing duckweed species, Lemna minor and Spirodela polyrhiza, often used in nutrient and metal bioremediation...
January 2024: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061824/human-fatalities-related-to-a-phaeocystis-harmful-algal-bloom-in-the-north-sea
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Louis Peperzak, René van Wezel
On May 11, 2020, five surfers drowned after asphyxiation in a massive foam bank near the Dutch coast. We present a detailed account of the event and an examination of factors that govern local foam events, that are traditionally caused by Phaeocystis globosa (Prymnesiophyceae). The data support the hypothesis that the foam originated from a Phaeocystis bloom which if correct would make this accident the first report of human fatalities due to a harmful algal bloom in The Netherlands, and the first globally due to a Phaeocystis bloom...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061823/concentration-of-total-microcystins-associates-with-nitrate-and-nitrite-and-may-disrupt-the-nitrogen-cycle-in-warm-monomictic-lakes-of-the-southcentral-united-states
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Crista M Kieley, Daniel L Roelke, Royoung Park, Kathryn L Campbell, N Hagen Klobusnik, Jordan R Walker, Sierra E Cagle, Marissa L Kneer, Kevin M Stroski, Bryan W Brooks, Jessica M Labonté
Cyanobacterial blooms and the toxins they produce pose a growing threat worldwide. Mitigation of such events has primarily focused on phosphorus management and has largely neglected the role of nitrogen. Previous bloom research and proposed management strategies have primarily focused on temperate, dimictic lakes, and less on warm-monomictic systems like those at subtropical latitudes. The in-lake conditions, concentration of total microcystins, and microbial functioning of twenty warm-monomictic lakes in the southcentral United States were explored in the spring and summer of 2021...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061822/in-situ-diets-of-the-bloom-forming-dinoflagellate-noctiluca-scintillans-in-daya-bay
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jingfu Chen, Yu Zhong, Lei Wang, Dajun Qiu
Red Noctiluca scintillans is a common heterotrophic dinoflagellate that forms blooms in temperate, subtropical, and tropical coastal ecosystems. The diet of this species plays an important role in its cell growth, development, and reproduction. Because limited gene diversity data are available regarding prey of this species, its diet in Daya Bay during a boreal winter bloom is reported using an integrated approach involving light microscopy, single cell isolation and plastid 16S rDNA cloning, and 18S rDNA V4 and V9 region amplification using isolated cells and environmental DNA as templates with high-throughput sequencing...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061821/phytoplankton-communities-of-the-west-coast-of-florida-multiyear-and-seasonal-responses-to-nutrient-enrichment
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E R Hall, L K Dixon, G J Kirkpatrick, A Nissanka, B A Pederson
Blooms of the harmful algae species Karenia brevis are frequent off the southwest coast of Florida despite having relatively slow growth rates. The regional frequency of these harmful algal blooms led to the examination of the dominant estuarine outflows for effects on both K. brevis and the phytoplankton community in general. There is comparatively little information on the growth rates of non-Karenia taxonomic groups other than diatoms. A seasonally based series (Fall, Winter, and Spring) of bioassay experiments were conducted to determine the nutrient response of the coastal phytoplankton community...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061820/contribution-of-the-satellitome-to-the-exceptionally-large-genome-of-dinoflagellates-the-case-of-the-harmful-alga-alexandrium-minutum
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ángeles Cuadrado, Eugenia E Montiel, Pablo Mora, Rosa I Figueroa, Pedro Lorite, Alfredo de Bustos
Dinoflagellates are known to possess an exceptionally large genome organized in permanently condensed chromosomes. Focusing on the contribution of satellite DNA (satDNA) to the whole DNA content of genomes and its potential role in the architecture of the chromosomes, we present the characterization of the satellitome of Alexandriun minutum strain VGO577. To achieve this, we analyzed Illumina reads using graph-based clustering and performed complementary bioinformatic analyses. In this way, we discovered 180 satDNAs occupying 17...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061819/does-prey-availability-influence-the-detection-of-dinophysis-spp-by-the-imaging-flowcytobot
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emilie Houliez, Alexis D Fischer, Brian D Bill, Stephanie K Moore
The Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) is a field-deployable imaging-in-flow cytometer that is increasingly being used to monitor harmful algae. The IFCB acquires images of suspended particles based on their chlorophyll-a fluorescence and/or the amount of light they scatter (side scattering). The present study hypothesized that fluorescence-based image acquisition would undercount Dinophysis spp., a genus of non-constitutive mixotrophs, when prey is limited. This is because Dinophysis spp. acquire plastids via ingestion of their ciliate prey Mesodinium spp...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38061818/isopropylthiol-emission-by-bloom-forming-microcystis-biochemistry-ecophysiology-and-semiochemistry-of-a-volatile-organosulfur-compound
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan B Watson, Friedrich Jüttner
Microcystis species not only produce toxic cyanobacterial blooms, but can be a significant source of taste and odour. Previous studies have associated foul-smelling volatile organic sulfur compounds (VOSCs) with Microcystis blooms, but have largely attributed these compounds to bacterial bloom decomposition. However, earlier reports of the production of isopropylthio compounds by several Microcystis strains suggests that these cyanobacteria may themselves be a source of these VOSCs. Sulphur compounds have been shown to play important semiochemical roles in algal cell protection and grazer interactions in marine systems, but little is known about the production and chemical ecology of freshwater cyanobacterial VOSCs...
December 2023: Harmful Algae
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