4.6 Article

Nitrogen form, concentration, and micronutrient availability affect microcystin production in cyanobacterial blooms

Journal

HARMFUL ALGAE
Volume 103, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2021.102002

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [1P01ES028942]

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The study found that different nitrogen forms and micronutrient supply affect cyanobacteria biomass and cyanotoxin production. While high urea and MN conditions led to increased biomass and particulate N production in laboratory cultures, it also resulted in lower microcystin-LR concentrations. In community HABs, the addition of micronutrients resulted in higher microcystin-LA concentrations compared to non-MN amended community HABs.
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are increasing in magnitude, frequency, and duration caused by anthropogenic factors such as eutrophication and altered climatic regimes. While the concentrations and ratios of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus are correlated with bloom biomass and cyanotoxin production, there is less known about how N forms and micronutrients (MN) interact to regulate HABs and cyanotoxin production. Here, we used two separate approaches to examine how N and MN supply affects cyanobacteria biomass and cyanotoxin production. First, we used a Microcystis laboratory culture to examine how N and MN concentration and N form affected the biomass, particulate N, and microcystin-LR concentration and cell quotas. Then, we monitored the N, iron, molybdenum, and total microcystin con-centrations from a hypereutrophic reservoir. From this hypereutrophic reservoir, we performed a community HAB bioassay to examine how N and MN addition affected the biomass, particulate N, and microcystin concentration. Microcystis laboratory cultures grown in high urea and MN conditions produced more biomass, particulate N, and had similar C:N stoichiometry, but lower microcystin-LR concentrations and cell quotas when compared to high nitrate and MN conditions. Our community HAB bioassay revealed no interactions between N concentration and MN addition caused by non-limiting MN background concentrations. Biomass, particulate N, and microcystin concentration increased with N addition. The community HAB amended with MN resulted in greater microcystin-LA concentration compared to non-MN amended community HABs. Our results highlight the complexity of how abiotic variables control biomass and cyanotoxin production in both laboratory cultures of Microcystis and community HABs.

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