Algal Blooms and Marine Biotoxins: 2000
Publications
Author: Turner, J.T.,
Doucette, G.J., Powell, C.L., Kulis, D.M., Keafer, B.A., and
Anderson, D.M.
Title: Accumulation of red tide toxins in larger size
fractions of zooplankton assemblages from Massachusetts Bay,
USA.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series 203:
95-107, 2000.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Phytoplankton toxins undergo trophic transport and accumulation in
marine food webs, causing vectorial intoxication of upper-level
consumers such as fishes, seabirds, and marine mammals. An entry
point for phytoplankton toxins into these pelagic trophic pathways
is frequently the herbivorous zooplankton. During the 1995
spring-summer red tide season in Massachusetts Bay, we examined
accumulation of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins from
the dinoflagellate Alexandrium spp. In various plankton
size fractions (20-64, 64-100, 100-200, 200-500, and >500
I-lm), and identified the relative composition of the zooplankton
in these size fractions. Toxin levels were estimated by both
high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and a
receptor-binding assay, the latter based on sample toxic potency.
Although no PSP toxicity was detected in nearshore shellfish by
routine monitoring programs using the mouse bioassay, positive
responses were detected in zooplankton size fractions with the
more sensitive HPLC and the receptor assay methods. The toxin
signal was disproportionately concentrated in the larger
zooplankton size fraction, frequently dominated by large copepods
such as Calanus finmarchicus and Centropages
typicus, which comprised only a small portion of total
zooplankton abundance in quantitative samples obtained with 100 mu
m mesh nets. By comparison, signal levels were low or undetectable
in the smaller size fraction, which contained the overwhelmingly
most-abundant zooplankters such as protists, copepod nauplii and
copepodites and adults of small copepods such as Oithona
similis, Paracalanus parvus, and Pseudocalanus
spp. The larger toxin-accumulating copepods could provide a direct
trophic linkage for vectorial intoxication of baleen whales that
are known to feed upon such copepods.
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