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Effect of salinity, temperature, organic and inorganic nutrients on growth of cultured Fibrocapsa japonica (Raphidophyceae) from the northern Adriatic Sea
- Source :
- Harmful Algae. 7:405-414
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2008.
-
Abstract
- The effects of temperature, salinity, inorganic and organic nutrients on the growth and physiological performance of Fibrocapsa japonica have been investigated in strains isolated from the northern Adriatic Sea, where intense and regular blooms have occurred since 1997 in coastal waters during summer. Strains isolated at different times and from different locations appeared homogeneous in terms of both physiological responses and molecular (ITS-5.8S rDNA) characteristics. Growth rates were higher at temperatures between 20 and 26 °C and in a salinity range of 30–35 (0.7 div day −1 ). The temperature of 16 °C inhibited growth, more markedly at the lowest and highest salinity values, a result also confirmed by a lower photosynthetic efficiency and by an increase in cell volume due to impaired division. Higher cell concentrations were obtained with macronutrients at f/2 levels than in a fivefold diluted medium. Comparing the utilization of 200 μM nitrate to that of different N sources (inorganic and organic), F. japonica showed an efficient growth with equivalent amounts of ammonia, urea and amino acids, such as glycine and tryptophan; glutamate was less effective, while methionine had toxic effects. Organic phosphate, administered as glycerophosphate, could also sustain F. japonica growth, probably on account of an alkaline phosphatase whose activity was enhanced in the presence of the organic form. Vitamins were necessary for growth, though no further stimulation was observed when a surplus of vitamin B12 (3 nM) was added. The addition of 11.7 μM iron instead of 2.3 μM, as well as that of humic acid, with or without macronutrients, did not enhance algal growth either. These results led us to hypothesise that F. japonica blooms became more frequent due to a general seawater temperature increase and to the availability of organic forms which, in coastal anthropized areas, are especially abundant in summer periods.
- Subjects :
- Adriatic Sea
Plant Science
Aquatic Science
NUTRIENTS
Japonica
ITS-5.8S rDNA
salinity
Fibrocapsa japonica
growth rate
inorganic and organic nutrients
temperature
chemistry.chemical_compound
Nutrient
Nitrate
Algae
SALINITY
Botany
Humic acid
TEMPERATURE
ITS-5.8S RDNA
chemistry.chemical_classification
biology
FIBROCAPSA JAPONICA
biology.organism_classification
Phosphate
Salinity
chemistry
Environmental chemistry
Seawater
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15689883
- Volume :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Harmful Algae
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7bcb6ae20910c235a476922bf6f8d519
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2007.09.002