4.7 Article

Interspecific competition between the bloom-causing dinoflagellates Hetrocapsa bohaiensis and the local species Chlorella pyrenoidosa

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2022.105855

Keywords

Allelopathy; Heterocapsa bohaiensis; Chlorella pyrenoidosa; Competition; Nutrients; Algal blooms

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Harmful algal blooms caused by Heterocapsa bohaiensis have been occurring in aquaculture areas near Liaodong Bay, China since 2012, resulting in mass mortality of Eriocheir sinensis larvae and significant economic loss. This study investigated the interspecific competition between H. bohaiensis and Chlorella pyrenoidosa to understand why H. bohaiensis dominates the phytoplankton community. The results showed that H. bohaiensis achieved competitive advantage through exploitation competition, rather than allelopathy.
Harmful algal blooms caused by Heterocapsa bohaiensis have broken out in aquaculture areas near Liaodong Bay, China, since 2012, resulting in mass mortality of Eriocheir sinensis larvae and substantial economic loss. Chlorella pyrenoidosa is a local phytoplankton species that is found in aquaculture ponds. However, the reason why H. bohaiensis dominated and proliferated in the phytoplankton community remains unknown. Previous studies have revealed the toxicity and hemolytic activity of H. bohaiensis. It is suspected that the out-competition of H. bohaiensis to C. pyrenoidosa was associated with toxicity. Filtrate and bi-algal cultures were investigated to determine the interspecific competition between H. bohaiensis and C. pyrenoidosa in this study. Filtrate experi-ments revealed that H. bohaiensis showed no toxin allelopathy in C. pyrenoidosa. However, the C. pyrenoidosa filtrates had significant allelopathic effects on the growth of H. bohaiensis. The bi-algal culture experiments and the simulation showed that the dominant species were dependent on the initial cell density ratios of the species and nutrient ratios. Therefore, H. bohaiensis achieved competitive advantage through exploitation competition but not allelopathy. The results contribute to the reasons for the occurrence of H. bohaiensis blooms in a further study.

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