Algal Blooms and Marine Biotoxins: 1996
Publications
Author:
McMinn, A., Hallegraeff, G.M., Thomson, P., Jenkinson, A.V.,
and Heijnis, H.
Title: Cyst and radionucleotide evidence for the
recent introduction of the toxic dinoflagellate Gymnodinium
catenatum into Tasmanian waters.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
161:165-172, 1997.
© Inter-Research
Notes : Cysts of the
dinoflagellate Gymnodinium catenatum were present only in
the top sections of duplicate marine sediment cores from Deep Bay
in southern Tasmania, Australia. Pb-210 and Cs-137 analyses
indicate that the appearance of the cyst of this toxic
dinoflagellate (one of the causative organisms of paralytic
shellfish poisoning) occurred after 1972. This sediment core
evidence and the absence of this species from the phytoplankton of
most other neighbouring Australian waters suggest that
Gymnodinium catenatum is not endemic to Tasmania but has
been introduced recently. This species was first seen in bloom
proportions in Tasmania in 1980, with major blooms having occurred
since then in 1986, 1991 and 1993. Several lines of evidence
suggest that, ballast water discharge from cargo vessels
originating from Japan and South Korea, or less likely Europe, is
the most probable mechanism of introduction.
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