4.6 Article

Effects of small-scale turbulence on two species of Dinophysis

Journal

HARMFUL ALGAE
Volume 89, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2019.101654

Keywords

Dinophysis acuminata; Dinophysis acuta; Mesodinium rubrum; Turbulence; Growth rates; Cell size; Turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate

Funding

  1. Spanish project DINOMA (RETOS Programme) [CGL2013-48861-R]
  2. Spanish project MARBioFEED (ERANET Marine Biotechnology) [PCIN-2015-252]
  3. Spanish Ministry MINEICO [EEBB-I-1712341]

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Dinoflagellate species of Dinophysis, in particular D. acuminata and D. acuta, produce lipophilic toxins that pose a threat to human health when concentrated in shellfish and jeopardize shellfish exploitations in western Europe. In northwestern Iberia, D. acuminata has a long growing season, from spring to early autumn, and populations develop as soon as shallow stratification forms when the upwelling season begins. In contrast, D. acuta blooms in late summer, when the depth of the pycnocline is maximal and upwelling pulses are moderate. In situ observations on the hydrodynamic regimes during the two windows of opportunity for Dinophysis species led us to hypothesize that D. acuta should be more sensitive to turbulence than D. acuminata. To test this hypothesis, we studied the response of D. acuminata and D. acuta to three realistic turbulence levels-low (LT), epsilon approximate to 10(-6)m(2)s(-3); medium (MT), epsilon approximate to 10(-5) m(2)s(-3) and high (HT), epsilon approximate to 10(-4)m(2)s(-3)-generated by Tttrbogen, a highly reproducible, computer-controlled system. Cells of both species exposed to LT and MT grew at rates similar to the controls. Marked differences were found in the response to HT: D. acuminata grew slowly after an initial lag phase, whereas D. acuta cell numbers declined. Results from this study support the hypothesis that turbulence may play a role in shaping the spatio-temporal distribution of individual species of Dinophysis. We also hypothesize that, in addition to cell disturbance affecting division, sustained high shear generated by microturbulence may cause a decline in Dinophysis numbers due to decreased densities of ciliate prey.

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