New 'phantom' dinoflagellate is the causative agent of major estuarine fish kills
- 30 July 1992
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 358 (6385) , 407-410
- https://doi.org/10.1038/358407a0
Abstract
A worldwide increase in toxic phytoplankton blooms over the past 20 years has coincided with increasing reports of fish diseases and deaths of unknown cause. Among estuaries that have been repeatedly associated with unexplained fish kills on the western Atlantic Coast are the Pamlico and Neuse Estuaries of the southeastern United States. Here we describe a new toxic dinoflagellate with 'phantom-like' behaviour that has been identified as the causative agent of a significant portion of the fish kills in these estuaries, and which may also be active in other geographic regions. The alga requires live finfish or their fresh excreta for excystment and release of a potent toxin. Low cell densities cause neurotoxic signs and fish death, followed by rapid algal encystment and dormancy unless live fish are added. This dinoflagellate was abundant in the water during major fish kills in local estuaries, but only while fish were dying; within several hours of death where carcasses were still present, the flagellated vegetative algal population had encysted and settled back to the sediments. Isolates from each event were highly lethal to finfish and shellfish in laboratory bioassays. Given its broad temperature and salinity tolerance, and its stimulation by phosphate enrichment, this toxic phytoplankter may be a widespread but undetected source of fish mortality in nutrient-enriched estuaries.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Potential impact of a toxic dinoflagellate (Alexandrium excavatum) bloom on survival of fish and crustacean larvaeMarine Biology, 1991
- Seasonal and hydrological control of phytoplankton nutrient limitation in the lower Neuse River Estuary, North CarolinaMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1991
- A Review of the Effects of Algal Blooms on Shellfish and AquacultureJournal of the World Aquaculture Society, 1990
- Primary Production and the Global Epidemic of Phytoplankton Blooms in the Sea: A Linkage?Published by Springer Nature ,1989
- Phytoplankton and catfish culture: a reviewAquaculture, 1988
- Three estuarine Australian dinoflagellates that can produce paralytic shellfish toxinsJournal of Plankton Research, 1988
- Mortalities of Salmo gairdneri exposed to cultures of Gyrodinium aureolumJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1983
- PHAGOTROPHY IN GYMNODINIUM FUNGIFORME (PYRRHOPHYTA): THE PEDUNCLE AS AN ORGANELLE OF INGESTION1Journal of Phycology, 1982
- Sensitivity of marine fishes to toxins from the red-tide dinoflagellate Gonyaulax excavata and implications for fish killsMarine Biology, 1981
- Inhibitory Effects of Phytoplankton upon the Feeding of Daphnia Magna with Reference to Growth, Reproduction, and SurvivalEcology, 1954