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Quantification of microcystin production and biodegradation rates in the western basin of Lake Erie

Authors :
Chaffin, Justin D.
Westrick, Judy A.
Furr, Elliot
Birbeck, Johnna A.
Reitz, Laura A.
Stanislawczyk, Keara
Li, Wei
Weber, Peter K.
Bridgeman, Thomas B.
Davis, Timothy W.
Mayali, Xavier
Source :
Limnology and Oceanography; July 2022, Vol. 67 Issue: 7 p1470-1483, 14p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Cyanobacterial biomass forecasts currently cannot predict the concentrations of microcystin, one of the most ubiquitous cyanotoxins that threaten human and wildlife health globally. Mechanistic insights into how microcystin production and biodegradation by heterotrophic bacteria change spatially and throughout the bloom season can aid in toxin concentration forecasts. We quantified microcystin production and biodegradation during two growth seasons in two western Lake Erie sites with different physicochemical properties commonly plagued by summer Microcystisblooms. Microcystin production rates were greater with elevated nutrients than under ambient conditions and were highest nearshore during the initial phases of the bloom, and production rates were lower in later bloom phases. We examined biodegradation rates of the most common and toxic microcystin by adding extracellular stable isotope‐labeled microcystin‐LR (1 μg L−1), which remained stable in the abiotic treatment (without bacteria) with minimal adsorption onto sediment, but strongly decreased in all unaltered biotic treatments, suggesting biodegradation. Greatest biodegradation rates (highest of −8.76 d−1, equivalent to the removal of 99.98% in 18 h) were observed during peak bloom conditions, while lower rates were observed with lower cyanobacteria biomass. Cell‐specific nitrogen incorporation from microcystin‐LR by nanoscale imaging mass spectrometry showed that a small percentage of the heterotrophic bacterial community actively degraded microcystin‐LR. Microcystin production and biodegradation rates, combined with the microcystin incorporation by single cells, suggest that microcystin predictive models could be improved by incorporating toxin production and biodegradation rates, which are influenced by cyanobacterial bloom stage (early vs. late bloom), nutrient availability, and bacterial community composition.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00243590 and 19395590
Volume :
67
Issue :
7
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Limnology and Oceanography
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs60334027
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.12096