학술논문

Effect of vitamins B₁ and B 12 on bloom dynamics of the harmful brown tide alga, Aureococcus anophagefferens (Pelagophyceae)
Document Type
research-article
Source
Limnology and Oceanography, 2013 Jan 01. 58(5), 1761-1774.
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
00243590
19395590
Abstract
Most harmful algae require B vitamins. We investigated vitamin use by the B1 and B12 auxotroph, Aureococcus anophagefferens , a harmful alga that dominates plankton communities during dense “brown tides” in North America, Africa, and Asia. B 12 -depleted cultures of A. anophagefferens (clone CCMP1984) adapted to lower ambient B 12 concentrations by reducing half-saturation constants (K s ) of B 12 uptake and increasing maximum uptake rates (V max ) compared to vitamin-replete cultures. In contrast, V max of vitamin B₁ was higher in replete compared to the depleted cultures, whereas the K s values were similar for both. K s values for B 12 (5.0–21 pmol L −1 ) were similar to or higher than concentrations measured during brown tides, suggesting that B 12 may restrict the growth of this alga in the field. Over the course of a dense brown tide (> 10⁶ cells mL −1 ) in Quantuck Bay, New York, vitamin B₁ and B 12 concentrations declined from > 100 pmol L −1 to < 8 pmol L −1 , suggesting there was rapid uptake by A. anophagefferens and its associated microbial community. Experiments performed using radioisotope-labeled vitamins B₁ and B 12 and 14 C-bicarbonate indicated that plankton in the size range of A. anophagefferens (1–5 μ m) were responsible for the majority of primary production and the majority of vitamin B₁ uptake but shared vitamin B 12 uptake with smaller picoplankton (< 1 μ m). Vitamin uptake rates during the brown tide were capable of turning over standing stocks of vitamin B 12 in 15 h, whereas B₁ depletion was slower with maximal turnover times of 2.8 d. As the brown tide intensified and vitamin B 12 levels declined, the experimental enrichment of brown tide water with vitamin B 12 significantly enhanced the growth rates of A. anophagefferens . Collectively, this study demonstrates that vitamin B 12 can influence the intensity of harmful algal blooms caused by A. anophagefferens .