23 results on '"Purdie DA"'
Search Results
2. Phytoplankton photosynthesis-irradiance parameters in the near-shore UK coastal waters of the North Sea: temporal variation and environmental control
- Author
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Shaw, PJ, primary and Purdie, DA, additional
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Plankton community respiration and its relationship to chlorophyll a concentration in marine coastal waters
- Author
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Iriarte, A, Daneri, G, Garcia, Vmt, Purdie, Da, Crawford, Dw, Iriarte, A, Daneri, G, Garcia, Vmt, Purdie, Da, and Crawford, Dw
- Abstract
Rates of plankton community respiration and chlorophyll a levels were measured in water samples collected at several times of the year in the North Sea, and during July in the English Channel. Planktonic community respiration rates ranged from 0.025 to 0.830-mu-mol O2 l-1 h-1. At low and moderate chlorophyll a concentrations (0-5-mu-g l-1) the correlation between algal biomass and community respiration was not significant. However, respiration and chlorophyll a did correlate significantly and positively at chlorophyll a levels in excess of 5-mu-g l-1. This is discussed in terms of the relative contribution to the total community respiration of autotrophs and microheterotrophs. It is argued that at low and moderate chlorophyll a concentrations, the microheterotrophs make the most substantial contribution to community respiration rates whilst at exceptionally high concentrations of chlorophyll a autotrophic dark respiration can be the dominant component of the plankton community respiration in the water column. The ratio of respiration to maximum photosynthesis (R/P(max)%) is considered to be a useful indicator of the trophic balance of the plankton community. The range of this ratio varied from 2.2 to 75.9, lowest values being recorded in water masses with high rates of net algal growth.
- Published
- 1991
4. Size distribution of chlorophyll a biomass and primary production in a temperate estuary (Southampton Water): the contribution of photosynthetic picoplankton
- Author
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Iriarte, A, primary and Purdie, DA, additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Evidence for avoidance of flushing from an estuary by a planktonic, phototrophic ciliate
- Author
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Crawford, DW, primary and Purdie, DA, additional
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Control of scabies, skin sores and haematuria in children in the Solomon Islands: another role for ivermectin
- Author
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Lawrence Gregor, Leafasia Judson, Sheridan John, Hills Susan, Wate Janet, Wate Christine, Montgomery Janet, Pandeya Nirmala, and Purdie David
- Subjects
Scabies/drug therapy ,Scabies/complications ,Ivermectin/administration and dosage ,Permethrin/therapeutic use ,Pyoderma/microbiology ,Skin ulcer/microbiology ,Streptococcus pyogenes ,Nephritis/etiology ,Hematuria ,Solomon Islands ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of a 3-year programme aimed at controlling scabies on five small lagoon islands in the Solomon Islands by monitoring scabies, skin sores, streptococcal skin contamination, serology and haematuria in the island children. METHODS: Control was achieved by treating almost all residents of each island once or twice within 2 weeks with ivermectin (160-250 mg/kg), except for children who weighed less than 15 kg and pregnant women, for whom 5% permethrin cream was used. Reintroduction of scabies was controlled by treating returning residents and visitors, whether or not they had evident scabies. FINDINGS: Prevalence of scabies dropped from 25% to less than 1% (P < 0.001); prevalence of sores from 40% to 21% (P < 0.001); streptococcal contamination of the fingers in those with and without sores decreased significantly (P = 0.02 and 0.047, respectively) and anti-DNase B levels decreased (P = 0.002). Both the proportion of children with haematuria and its mean level fell (P = 0.002 and P < 0.001, respectively). No adverse effects of the treatments were seen. CONCLUSION: The results show that ivermectin is an effective and practical agent in the control of scabies and that control reduces the occurrence of streptococcal skin disease and possible signs of renal damage in children. Integrating community-based control of scabies and streptococcal skin disease with planned programmes for controlling filariasis and intestinal nematodes could be both practical and produce great health benefits.
- Published
- 2005
7. Population attributable risk of breast cancer in white women associated with immediately modifiable risk factors
- Author
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Glaser Sally L, Purdie David M, and Clarke Christina A
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Estrogen/progestin replacement therapy (EPRT), alcohol consumption, physical activity, and breast-feeding duration differ from other factors associated with breast cancer in being immediately modifiable by the individual, thereby representing attractive targets for future breast cancer prevention efforts. To justify such efforts, it is vital to quantify the potential population-level impacts on breast cancer considering population variations in behavior prevalence, risk estimate, and baseline incidence. Methods For each of these four factors, we calculated population attributable risk percents (PARs) using population-based survey (2001) and cancer registry data (1998–2002) for 41 subpopulations of white, non-Hispanic California women aged 40–79 years, and ranges of relative risk (RR) estimates from the literature. Results Using a single RR estimate, subpopulation PARs ranged from 2.5% to 5.6% for hormone use, from 0.0% to 6.1% for recent consumption of >= 2 alcoholic drinks daily, and 4.6% to 11.0% for physical inactivity. Using a range of RR estimates, PARs were 2–11% for EPRT use, 1–20% for alcohol consumption and 2–15% for physical inactivity. Subpopulation data were unavailable for breastfeeding, but PARs using published RR estimates ranged from 2% to 11% for lifetime breastfeeding >= 31 months. Thus, of 13,019 breast cancers diagnosed annually in California, as many as 1,432 attributable to EPRT use, 2,604 attributable to alcohol consumption, 1,953 attributable to physical inactivity, and 1,432 attributable to never breastfeeding might be avoidable. Conclusion The relatively feasible lifestyle changes of discontinuing EPRT use, reducing alcohol consumption, increasing physical activity, and lengthening breastfeeding duration could lower population breast cancer incidence substantially.
- Published
- 2006
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8. Mental health: A cause or consequence of injury? A population-based matched cohort study
- Author
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Kliewer Erich V, Purdie David M, Cameron Cate M, and McClure Rod J
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background While a number of studies report high prevalence of mental health problems among injured people, the temporal relationship between injury and mental health service use has not been established. This study aimed to quantify this relationship using 10 years of follow-up on a population-based cohort of hospitalised injured adults. Methods The Manitoba Injury Outcome Study is a retrospective population-based matched cohort study that utilised linked administrative data from Manitoba, Canada, to identify an inception cohort (1988–1991) of hospitalised injured cases (ICD-9-CM 800–995) aged 18–64 years (n = 21,032), which was matched to a non-injured population-based comparison group (n = 21,032). Pre-injury comorbidity and post-injury mental health data were obtained from hospital and physician claims records. Negative Binomial regression was used to estimate adjusted rate ratios (RRs) to measure associations between injury and mental health service use. Results Statistically significant differences in the rates of mental health service use were observed between the injured and non-injured, for the pre-injury year and every year of the follow-up period. The injured cohort had 6.56 times the rate of post-injury mental health hospitalisations (95% CI 5.87, 7.34) and 2.65 times the rate of post-injury mental health physician claims (95% CI 2.53, 2.77). Adjusting for comorbidities and pre-existing mental health service use reduced the hospitalisations RR to 3.24 (95% CI 2.92, 3.60) and the physician claims RR to 1.53 (95% CI 1.47, 1.59). Conclusion These findings indicate the presence of pre-existing mental health conditions is a potential confounder when investigating injury as a risk factor for subsequent mental health problems. Collaboration with mental health professionals is important for injury prevention and care, with ongoing mental health support being a clearly indicated service need by injured people and their families. Public health policy relating to injury prevention and control needs to consider mental health strategies at the primary, secondary and tertiary level.
- Published
- 2006
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9. Dinophysis spp. abundance and toxicity events in South Cornwall, U.K.: Interannual variability and environmental drivers at three coastal sites.
- Author
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Panton A and Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Harmful Algal Bloom, Marine Toxins, Retrospective Studies, Dinoflagellida, Shellfish Poisoning
- Abstract
Dinophysis is a genus of dinoflagellates with the potential to cause diarrhoeic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP) in humans. The lipophilic toxins produced by some species of Dinophysis spp. can accumulate within shellfish flesh even at low cell abundances, and this may result in the closure of a shellfish farm if toxins exceed the recommended upper limit. Over the period 2014 to 2020 inclusive there were several toxic events along the South West coast of U.K. related to Dinophysis spp. The Food Standards Agency (FSA) monitoring programme measure Dinophysis cell abundances and toxin concentration within shellfish flesh around the coasts of England and Wales, but there are few schemes routinely measuring the environmental parameters that may be important drivers for these Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs). This study uses retrospective data from the FSA monitoring at three sites on the south Cornwall coast as well as environmental data from some novel platforms such as coastal WaveRider buoys to investigate potential drivers and explore whether either blooms or toxic events at these sites can be predicted from environmental data. Wind direction was found to be important in determining whether a bloom develops at these sites, and low air temperature in June was associated with low toxicity in the shellfish flesh. Using real time data from local platforms may help shellfish farmers predict future toxic events and minimise financial loss., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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10. Harmful algal blooms of Heterosigma akashiwo and environmental features regulate Mesodinium cf. rubrum abundance in eutrophic conditions.
- Author
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Lemley DA, Adams JB, Rishworth GM, and Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Estuaries, Harmful Algal Bloom, Phytoplankton, Ciliophora, Stramenopiles
- Abstract
Functional drivers of phytoplankton that can potentially form harmful algal blooms (HABs) are important to understand given the increased prevalence of anthropogenic modification and pressure on coastal habitats. However, teasing these drivers apart from other influences is problematic in natural systems, while laboratory assessments often fail to replicate relevant natural conditions. One such potential bloom-forming species complex highlighted globally is Mesodinium cf. rubrum, a planktonic ciliate. This species occurs persistently in the Sundays Estuary in South Africa yet has never been observed to "bloom" (> 1,000 cell.ml
-1 ). Modified by artificial nutrient-rich baseflow conditions, the Sundays Estuary provides a unique Southern Hemisphere case study to identify the autecological drivers of this ciliate due to artificial seasonally "controlled" abiotic environmental conditions. This study utilised a three-year monitoring dataset (899 samples) to assess the drivers of M. cf. rubrum using a generalised modelling approach. Key abiotic variables that influenced population abundance were season and salinity, with M. cf. rubrum populations peaking in summer and spring and preferring polyhaline salinity regions (>18) with pronounced water column salinity stratification, especially in warmer months. This was reflected in the diel vertical migration (DVM) behaviour of this species, demonstrating its ability to utilise the optimal daylight photosynthetic surface conditions and high-nutrient bottom waters at night. The only phytoplankton groups clearly associated with M. cf. rubrum were Raphidophyceae and Cryptophyceae. Although M. cf. rubrum reflects a niche overlap with the dominant HAB-forming phytoplankton in the estuary (the raphidophyte, Heterosigma akashiwo), its reduced competitive abilities restrict its abundance. In contrast, the mixotrophic foraging behaviour of M. cf. rubrum exerts a top-down control on cryptophyte prey abundance, yet, the limited availability of these prey resources (mean < 300 cells ml-1 ) seemingly inhibits the formation of red-water accumulations. Hydrodynamic variability is necessary to ensure that no single phytoplankton HAB-forming taxa outcompetes the rest. These results confirm aspects of the autecology of M. cf. rubrum related to salinity associations and DVM behaviour and contribute to a global understanding of managing HABs in estuaries., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2020
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11. The impact of rainfall events, catchment characteristics and estuarine processes on the export of dissolved organic matter from two lowland rivers and their shared estuary.
- Author
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Panton A, Couceiro F, Fones GR, and Purdie DA
- Abstract
Terrestrially-derived dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nitrogen (DON) transported by rivers have been recognised as contributors to aquatic nutrient burdens, and can be of importance in rivers and estuaries already impacted by anthropogenic inorganic nutrient discharges. The concentration of DOC and DON and the flux of both to the estuary and ultimately the coastal zone is dependent upon many factors including rainfall, catchment land use, and biological processes. DOC and DON concentrations together with nitrate plus nitrite and ammonium concentrations were measured in the anthropogenically-impacted estuary Christchurch Harbour (UK) and at sites in the lower reaches of its two source rivers, the Hampshire Avon and the Stour, at weekly intervals for a year during which time several extreme rainfall events occurred. A series of transects along the estuary were also performed after weekly sampling was completed. DOC concentrations were correlated between both rivers and the estuary and were positively related to increases in river flow, but DON concentrations revealed a more complicated picture. Peak instantaneous fluxes of DOC and DON exceeded 60,000 kg C d
-1 and 7000 kg N d-1 respectively both in the Stour and the estuary during high flow periods. The sources of both and routes by which they enter the aquatic system may account for the differences in dynamics, with flushing of superficial soils being a key source of DOC and point sources such as sewage treatment works being proposed as sources of DON. Removal processes within the estuary were also of importance for DON concentrations whilst DOC behaved more conservatively with some evidence of local production within the estuary. Estimated annual loads of DON and DOC to the coastal zone from Christchurch Harbour were 118 kg N km-2 y-1 and 2296 kg C km-2 y-1 ., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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12. Modelling flow and inorganic nitrogen dynamics on the Hampshire Avon: Linking upstream processes to downstream water quality.
- Author
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Jin L, Whitehead PG, Heppell CM, Lansdown K, Purdie DA, and Trimmer M
- Subjects
- Denitrification, England, Environmental Monitoring, Models, Theoretical, Rivers, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Water Quality, Ammonium Compounds analysis, Nitrates analysis, Water Movements
- Abstract
Managing diffuse pollution in catchments is a major issue for environmental managers planning to meet water quality standards and comply with the EU Water Framework Directive. A major source of diffuse pollution is from nitrogen, with high nitrate concentrations affecting water supplies and in-stream ecology. A dynamic, process based model of flow, nitrate and ammonium (INCA-N) has been applied to the Hampshire Avon as part of the NERC Macronutrient Cycles Programme to link upstream and downstream measurements of water chemistry. The model has been calibrated and validated against Environment Agency discharge and solute chemistry data, as well as a data set collected from a river site immediately upstream of the estuary tidal limit. Upstream measurements of denitrification at six sites have been used to evaluate nitrate removal rates in vegetated and non-vegetated conditions. Results show that sediments underlying vegetation were associated with significantly higher rates of nitrate removal than un-vegetated sediments (with an average increase of 245%). These data have been used to scale up rates of nitrate loss to the whole catchment scale and have been implemented via the model. The effects of streambed geology and macrophyte cover on catchment-scale nitrogen dynamics are explored and nutrient fluxes entering the estuary are evaluated. The model is used to test a strategy for nitrogen reduction assessed using a nitrate vulnerable zone (NVZ) methodology. It suggests that nitrate and ammonium concentrations could be reduced by 10% in 10years and much lower nitrogen level can be achieved but only over a long time period., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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13. Modelling macronutrient dynamics in the Hampshire Avon river: A Bayesian approach to estimate seasonal variability and total flux.
- Author
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Pirani M, Panton A, Purdie DA, and Sahu SK
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, England, Models, Biological, Environmental Monitoring methods, Nitrates analysis, Phosphates analysis, Rivers chemistry, Water Movements, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
The macronutrients nitrate and phosphate are aquatic pollutants that arise naturally, however, in excess concentrations they can be harmful to human health and ecosystems. These pollutants are driven by river currents and show dynamics that are affected by weather patterns and extreme rainfall events. As a result, the nutrient budget in the receiving estuaries and coasts can change suddenly and seasonally, causing ecological damage to resident wildlife and fish populations. In this paper, we propose a statistical change-point model with interactions between time and river flow, to capture the macronutrient dynamics and their responses to river flow threshold behaviour. It also accounts for the nonlinear effect of water quality properties via nonparametric penalised splines. This model enables us to estimate the daily levels of riverine macronutrient fluxes and their seasonal and annual totals. In particular, we present a study of macronutrient dynamics on the Hampshire Avon River, which flows to the southern coast of the UK through the Christchurch Harbour estuary. We model daily data for more than a year during 2013-14 in which period there were multiple severe meteorological conditions leading to localised flooding. Adopting a Bayesian inference framework, we have quantified riverine macronutrient fluxes based on input river flow values. Out of sample empirical validation methods justify our approach, which captures also the dependencies of macronutrient concentrations with water body characteristics., (Copyright © 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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14. Internal and external influences on near-surface microbial community structure in the vicinity of the Cape Verde Islands.
- Author
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Hill PG, Heywood JL, Holland RJ, Purdie DA, Fuchs BM, and Zubkov MV
- Subjects
- Alphaproteobacteria genetics, Alphaproteobacteria isolation & purification, Aquatic Organisms classification, Atlantic Ocean, Bacteria genetics, Bacteroidetes genetics, Bacteroidetes isolation & purification, Cabo Verde, Cyanobacteria genetics, Cyanobacteria isolation & purification, Gammaproteobacteria genetics, Gammaproteobacteria isolation & purification, Plankton microbiology, Bacteria isolation & purification, Microbial Consortia, Seawater microbiology
- Abstract
Microbial community structure in the subtropical north-east Atlantic Ocean was compared between 2 years and variation attributed to environmental variables. Surface seawater communities were analysed by flow cytometry and fluorescence in situ hybridisation. Probes specific to Alphaproteobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria and Bacteroidetes identified 67-100% of cells. Due to natural variation in the study region due to the occurrence of major currents and islands, data could not be pooled but were instead divided between distinct water masses. Community structure did not differ greatly around the Cape Verde Islands between sampling periods but varied substantially in the open ocean, suggesting different environmental perturbations favour specific bacterial groups. Wind speed varied significantly between years, with moderate to strong breeze in winter 2008 and gales in winter 2006 (8.9 ± 0.2 ms(-1) and 16.0 ± 0.4 ms(-1), respectively). Enhanced wind-driven turbulence was associated with domination by the SAR11 clade of Alphaproteobacteria, which were present at 2.4-fold in the abundance of Prochlorococcus (41.8 ± 1.6% cells, compared to 17.7 ± 7.1%). Conversely, the calmer conditions of 2008 seemed to favour Prochlorococcus (40.0 ± 1.2% cells). Prochlorococcus high-light adapted clade HLI were only numerous during wind-driven turbulence, whereas oligotrophic-adapted clade HLII dominated under calm conditions. Bacteroidetes were most prominent in turbulent conditions (9.5 ± 1.3% cells as opposed to 4.7 ± 0.3%), as were Synechococcus. In 2008, a considerable dust deposition event occurred in the region, which may have led to the substantial Gammaproteobacteria population (22.5 ± 4.0% cells compared to 4.6 ± 0.6% in 2006). Wind-driven turbulence may have a significant impact on microbial community structure in the surface ocean. Therefore, community change following dust storm events may be linked to associated wind in addition to dust-derived nutrients.
- Published
- 2012
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15. EFFECT OF ELEVATED TEMPERATURE, DARKNESS, AND HYDROGEN PEROXIDE TREATMENT ON OXIDATIVE STRESS AND CELL DEATH IN THE BLOOM-FORMING TOXIC CYANOBACTERIUM MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA(1).
- Author
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Bouchard JN and Purdie DA
- Abstract
This study assessed the implication of oxidative stress in the mortality of cells of Microcystis aeruginosa Kütz. Cultures grown at 25°C were exposed to 32°C, darkness, and hydrogen peroxide (0.5 mM) for 96 h. The cellular abundance, chl a concentration and content, maximum photochemical efficiency of PSII (Fv /Fm ratio), intracellular oxidative stress (determined with dihydrorhodamine 123 [DHR]), cell mortality (revealed by SYTOX-labeling of DNA), and activation of caspase 3-like proteins were assessed every 24 h. The presence of DNA degradation in cells of M. aeruginosa was also assessed using a terminal deoxynucletidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) assay at 96 h. Transferring cultures from 25°C to 32°C was generally beneficial to the cells. The cellular abundance and chl a concentration increased, and the mortality remained low (except for a transient burst at 72 h) as did the oxidative stress. In darkness, cells did not divide, and the Fv /Fm continuously decreased with time. The slow increase in intracellular oxidative stress coincided with the activation of caspase 3-like proteins and a 15% and 17% increase in mortality and TUNEL-positive cells, respectively. Exposure to hydrogen peroxide had the most detrimental effect on cells as growth ceased and the Fv /Fm declined to near zero in less than 24 h. The 2-fold increase in oxidative stress matched the activation of caspase 3-like proteins and a 40% and 37% increase in mortality and TUNEL-positive cells, respectively. These results demonstrate the implication of oxidative stress in the stress response and mortality of M. aeruginosa., (© 2011 Phycological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2011
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16. Differential responses of Prochlorococcus and SAR11-dominated bacterioplankton groups to atmospheric dust inputs in the tropical Northeast Atlantic Ocean.
- Author
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Hill PG, Zubkov MV, and Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Alphaproteobacteria classification, Alphaproteobacteria isolation & purification, Atlantic Ocean, Desert Climate, Flow Cytometry, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Methionine metabolism, Prochlorococcus classification, Prochlorococcus isolation & purification, Staining and Labeling, Sulfur Radioisotopes metabolism, Alphaproteobacteria metabolism, Dust, Plankton, Prochlorococcus metabolism, Seawater microbiology, Soil Microbiology
- Abstract
The metabolic responses of indigenous dominant bacterioplankton populations to additions of dust were examined in the tropical northeast Atlantic. Subsurface seawater samples were treated with dust, added directly or indirectly as a 'leachate' after its rapid dissolution in deionized water. Samples were incubated at ambient temperature and light for up to 24 h and microbial metabolic responses were assessed by (35)S-methionine ((35)S-Met) uptake. Prochlorococcus and low nucleic acid (LNA) cells were sorted by flow cytometry to determine their group-specific responses. Sorted cells were also phylogenetically affiliated using FISH. The high-light-adapted ecotype II dominated the Prochlorococcus group and 73+/-14% of LNA prokaryotes belonged to the SAR11 clade of Alphaproteobacteria. Both Prochlorococcus and LNA cells were metabolically impaired by the addition of dust (40+/-28% and 37+/-22% decrease in (35)S-Met uptake compared with controls, respectively). However, LNA bacterioplankton showed minor positive responses to dust leachate additions (7+/-4% increase in (35)S-Met uptake), while the metabolic activity of Prochlorococcus cells decreased in the presence of dust leachate by 16+/-11%. Thus, dust dissolution in situ appears to be more deleterious to Prochlorococcus than SAR11-dominated LNA bacterioplankton and hence could initiate a compositional shift in the indigenous bacterioplankton.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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17. Morphology, toxin composition and pigment content of Prorocentrum lima strains isolated from a coastal lagoon in southern UK.
- Author
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Nascimento SM, Purdie DA, and Morris S
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, Liquid, Dinoflagellida growth & development, England, Marine Toxins isolation & purification, Mass Spectrometry, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Okadaic Acid isolation & purification, Pigments, Biological isolation & purification, Pyrans isolation & purification, Pyrans metabolism, Seawater, Species Specificity, Dinoflagellida chemistry, Dinoflagellida ultrastructure, Marine Toxins metabolism, Okadaic Acid metabolism, Pigments, Biological metabolism
- Abstract
Prorocentrum lima was isolated from the coastal Fleet lagoon, Dorset, UK in 2000 and a number of clonal cultures established. These were analyzed for okadaic acid (OA), dinophysistoxin-1 (DTX-1), DTX-2, DTX-4 and diol esters by liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. OA concentrations varied from 0.4 to 17.1pg OAcell(-1) and DTX-1 from 0.4 to 11.3pg DTX-1cell(-1); DTX-2 was not detected in these isolates. OA and DTX-1 were detected in the culture media, as a result of toxin excretion. DTX-4 and a selection of DTX-4 diol esters were identified using selected ion monitoring, although not all strains produced these compounds. Cell size and number of marginal and valve pores of each strain were observed using scanning electron microscopy. OA and DTX-1 concentrations, pigment content and changes in nitrate and phosphate concentrations in the culture media were followed during growth of one strain of P. lima in batch culture. Diarrhetic shellfish poisoning (DSP) toxins have been previously detected in shellfish cultivated in the Fleet lagoon, but in the absence of any Dinophysis sp. cells. The identification of toxic P. lima strains from the Fleet suggests that this dinoflagellate is the most probable source of occasional DSP detected in the lagoon.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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18. Dynamics of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase gene expression in the coccolithophorid Coccolithus pelagicus during a tracer release experiment in the Northeast Atlantic.
- Author
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Wyman M, Davies JT, Hodgson S, Tarran GA, and Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Atlantic Ocean, Gene Expression, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Sulfur Hexafluoride, Eukaryota enzymology, Eukaryota genetics, Phytoplankton enzymology, Phytoplankton genetics, Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase genetics
- Abstract
We report a pronounced diel rhythm in ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) gene expression in a natural population of the coccolithophorid Coccolithus pelagicus sampled during a Lagrangian experiment in the Northeast Atlantic. Our observations show that there is greater heterogeneity in the temporal regulation of RubisCO expression among planktonic chromophytes than has been reported hitherto.
- Published
- 2005
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19. Molecular and physiological responses of two classes of marine chromophytic phytoplankton (Diatoms and prymnesiophytes) during the development of nutrient-stimulated blooms.
- Author
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Wyman M, Davies JT, Crawford DW, and Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Biomass, Blotting, Northern, DNA Probes, Diatoms genetics, Diatoms physiology, Ecosystem, Molecular Sequence Data, Phytoplankton classification, Plant Proteins metabolism, Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase metabolism, Seawater microbiology, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Species Specificity, Phytoplankton genetics, Phytoplankton physiology, Plant Proteins genetics, Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase genetics
- Abstract
Generic taxon-specific DNA probes that target an internal region of the gene (rbcL) encoding the large subunit of ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) were developed for two groups of marine phytoplankton (diatoms and prymnesiophytes). The specificity and utility of the probes were evaluated in the laboratory and also during a 1-month mesocosm experiment in which we investigated the temporal variability in RubisCO gene expression and primary production in response to inorganic nutrient enrichment. We found that the onset of successive bloom events dominated by each of the two classes of chromophyte algae was associated with marked taxon-specific increases in rbcL transcription rates. These observations suggest that measurements of RubisCO gene expression can provide an early indicator of the development of phytoplankton blooms and may also be useful in predicting which taxa are likely to dominate a bloom.
- Published
- 2000
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20. The National Women's Hospital settlement.
- Author
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Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, New Zealand, Liability, Legal economics, Malpractice economics, Mass Media, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms prevention & control
- Published
- 1992
21. The Cartwright inquiry.
- Author
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Purdie DA
- Subjects
- Humans, New Zealand, Physician's Role, Publishing, Women's Rights
- Published
- 1990
22. Response: bacteria: link or sink?
- Author
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Ducklow HW, Purdie DA, Williams PJ, and Davies JM
- Published
- 1987
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23. Bacterioplankton: a sink for carbon in a coastal marine plankton community.
- Author
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Ducklow HW, Purdie DA, Williams PJ, and Davies JM
- Abstract
Recent determinations of high production rates (up to 30 percent of primary production in surface waters) implicate free-living marine bacterioplankton as a link in a "microbial loop" that supplements phytoplankton as food for herbivores. An enclosed water column of 300 cubic meters was used to test the microbial loop hypothesis by following the fate of carbon-14-labeled bacterioplankton for over 50 days. Only 2 percent of the label initially fixed from carbon-14-labeled glucose by bacteria was present in larger organisms after 13 days, at which time about 20 percent of the total label added remained in the particulate fraction. Most of the label appeared to pass directly from particles smaller than 1 micrometer (heterotrophic bacterioplankton and some bacteriovores) to respired labeled carbon dioxide or to regenerated dissolved organic carbon-14. Secondary (and, by implication, primary) production by organisms smaller than 1 micrometer may not be an important food source in marine food chains. Bacterioplankton can be a sink for carbon in planktonic food webs and may serve principally as agents of nutrient regeneration rather than as food.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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