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Influence of genetic background, salinity, and inoculum size on growth of the ichthyotoxic golden alga (Prymnesium parvum).

Authors :
Rashel, Rakib H.
Patiño, Reynaldo
Source :
Harmful Algae. Jun2017, Vol. 66, p97-104. 8p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Salinity (5–30) effects on golden alga growth were determined at a standard laboratory temperature (22 °C) and one associated with natural blooms (13 °C). Inoculum-size effects were determined over a wide size range (100–100,000 cells ml −1 ). A strain widely distributed in the USA, UTEX-2797 was the primary study subject but another of limited distribution, UTEX-995 was used to evaluate growth responses in relation to genetic background. Variables examined were exponential growth rate ( r ), maximum cell density (max-D) and, when inoculum size was held constant (100 cells ml −1 ), density at onset of exponential growth (early-D). In UTEX-2797, max-D increased as salinity increased from 5 to ∼10–15 and declined thereafter regardless of temperature but r remained generally stable and only declined at salinity of 25–30. In addition, max-D correlated positively with r and early-D, the latter also being numerically highest at salinity of 15. In UTEX-995, max-D and r responded similarly to changes in salinity − they remained stable at salinity of 5–10 and 5–15, respectively, and declined at higher salinity. Also, max-D correlated with r but not early-D. Inoculum size positively and negatively influenced max-D and r , respectively, in both strains and these effects were significant even when the absolute size difference was small (100 versus 1000 cells ml −1 ). When cultured under similar conditions, UTEX-2797 grew faster and to much higher density than UTEX-995. In conclusion, (1) UTEX-2797’s superior growth performance may explain its relatively wide distribution in the USA, (2) the biphasic growth response of UTEX-2797 to salinity variation, with peak abundance at salinity of 10–15, generally mirrors golden alga abundance-salinity associations in US inland waters, and (3) early cell density – whether artificially manipulated or naturally attained – can influence UTEX-2797 bloom potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15689883
Volume :
66
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Harmful Algae
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
123530483
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2017.05.010