4.6 Article

In hot water: Interactions of temperature, nitrogen form and availability and photosynthetic and nitrogen uptake responses in natural Karenia brevis populations

Journal

HARMFUL ALGAE
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2023.102519

Keywords

Karenia brevis; Relative electron transport rate; Fv/Fm; Nitrogen uptake; Temperature; Urea

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During 2020-2021, there was an unusually prolonged bloom of toxigenic dinoflagellate Karenia brevis along the Gulf coast of Florida, causing severe environmental effects. The study found that the summer populations were photosynthetically and nutritionally stressed, but showed a stronger response to urea than other nitrogen substrates.
During 2020-2021, an unusually prolonged bloom of the toxigenic dinoflagellate Karenia brevis persisted for more than 12 months along the Gulf coast of Florida, resulting in severe environmental effects. Motivated by the possibility that unusual nutrient conditions existed during summer 2021, the short-term interactions of temperature, nitrogen (N) forms (ammonium (NH4+), nitrate (NO3 - ), and urea) and availability on photosynthesisirradiance responses and N uptake rates were examined in summer 2021 and compared to such responses from the earlier winter. Winter samples were exposed to temperatures of 15, 20, 25, 30 degrees C while summer samples were incubated at 15, 25, 30, 33 degrees C, representing the maximum range the cells might experience throughout the water column due to daytime surface heating or extreme weather events. Depending on thermal history of the cells, photosynthetic performance differed when cells were exposed to the same temperature, showing a capacity for thermal acclimation in this species. Although blooms generally do not persist throughout the summer, bloom biomass was remarkably higher in summer than during the winter. However, most of the photosynthetic parameters and N uptake rates, as well as total carbon (C) and N cell-1 were significantly lower in the summer populations, showing that the summer populations were photosynthetically and nutritionally stressed. When the summer cells were treated with urea, however, uptake rates and total C and N cell-1 were higher than with the other N substrates, especially in warmer waters, showing differential thermal responses depending on N forms.

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