Publication | Closed Access
Control of Toxic Marine Dinoflagellate Blooms by Serial Parasitic Killers
318
Citations
19
References
2008
Year
Harmful MicroalgaeEngineeringNatural EstuaryMarine GenomicsMarine PollutionMicrobial EcologyToxicologyBiological OceanographyOther Dinoflagellate SpeciesParasitologyEcotoxicologyMarine BiotaSerial Parasitic KillersFluorescence MarkersBiologyBloom EcologyMarine EcologyMicrobiologyEnvironmental ToxicologyMarine BiologySymbiosisMedicine
The marine dinoflagellates commonly responsible for toxic red tides are parasitized by other dinoflagellate species. Using culture-independent environmental ribosomal RNA sequences and fluorescence markers, we identified host-specific infections among several species. Each parasitoid produces 60 to 400 offspring, leading to extraordinarily rapid control of the host's population. During 3 consecutive years of observation in a natural estuary, all dinoflagellates observed were chronically infected, and a given host species was infected by a single genetically distinct parasite year after year. Our observations in natural ecosystems suggest that although bloom-forming dinoflagellates may escape control by grazing organisms, they eventually succumb to parasite attack.
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