Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10880886 | Toxicon | 2005 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Four tropical PSP toxins-producing dinoflagellates, Alexandrium minutum, Alexandrium tamiyavanichii, Alexandrium tamarense and Alexandrium peruvianum from Malaysian waters were studied to investigate the influences of salinity on growth and toxin production. Experiments were conducted on constant temperature 25 °C, 140 μE mol mâ2 sâ1 and under 14:10 light:dark photo-cycle with salinity ranged from 2 to 30 psu. The PSP-toxin congeners, GTX 1-6, STX, dcSTX, NEO and C1-C2 were analysed by high performance liquid chromatography. Salinity tolerance of the four species in decreasing order is A. minutum>A. peruvianum>A. tamarense>A. tamiyavanichii. Specific growth rates and maximum densities varied among these species with A. minutum recorded as the highest, 0.5 dayâ1 and 6Ã104 cells mLâ1. Toxin content decreased with elevated salinities in A. minutum, the highest toxin content was about 12 fmole cellâ1 at 5 psu. In A. tamiyavanichii, toxin content peaked at optimal growth salinity (20 and 25 psu). Toxin content of A. tamarense, somehow peaked at sub-optimal growth salinity (15 and 30 psu). Results of this study implied that salinity fluctuation not only influenced the growth physiology but also toxin production of these species.
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Authors
Po-Teen Lim, Takehiko Ogata,