Publication | Open Access
Effects of Decabromodiphenyl Ether (BDE-209) on Inter-Specific Competition between Two Species of Marine Bloom-Forming Microalgae
26
Citations
48
References
2013
Year
Harmful MicroalgaeEngineeringPersistent Organic PollutantsEnvironmental ChemistryAlgal BiomassMarine Bloom-forming MicroalgaeAquacultureMarine PollutionMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyEcotoxicologyAlgal BiologyDecabromodiphenyl EtherBiologyMarine BiotechnologyAlgal CultivationAlgal ProductInter-specific CompetitionEnvironmental ToxicologyMarine Biology
Decabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-209), a new kind of persistent organic pollutants, was selected to investigate its influence on population growth and inter-specific competition between two species of marine bloom-forming microalgae, Heterosigma akashiwo and Karenia mikimotoi. (1)BDE-209 showed acute toxic effects on both microalgae and H. akashiwo was more sensitive from view of 96 h-EC50 and the ultrastructure variation. (2)The microalgal population growth patterns in mono-culture were density-dependent and the growth of both species in the normal co-culture was significantly depressed by competition (P<0.05) with different initial biomass ratios. BDE-209 exposure significantly changed the growth. (3) Lotka-Volterra competition model was used to simulate the interaction between the microalgae. BDE-209 exposure broke the competitive balance to make competition gradually shift in favor of H. akashiwo. Results suggested BDE-209 did have toxic effects on either microalgal growth or the inter-specific competition, which was quite different from previous reports. Further exploration of the mechanism is needed.
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