The fish-killing heterotrophic dino-flagellate species Pfiesteria piscicida and P. shumwayae (also Pseudopfiesteria shumwayae) were present throughout New Zealand and were residents of Tasman Bay's well-flushed estuaries and Canterbury's brackish lakes, as determined by polymerase chain reaction-based detection assays. The two species occurred in a wide range of salinities and temperatures, although detection was restricted seasonally from spring through to autumn, except for one incidence in the shallow waters of Wairewa/Lake Forsyth, Canterbury, in the winter of 2003. The DNA sequencing data indicated that P. shumwayae may encompass a suite of genetically closely related species. The presence of Pfiesteria in New Zealand is not considered an immediate risk to fish or human health given the current low-to-moderate nutrient concentrations in New Zealand's estuaries and brackish lakes. However, increases in nutrient loadings could pose a risk, as has occurred in eastern United States estuaries. © 2006, Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
CITATION STYLE
Rhodes, L. L., Adamson, J. E., Rublee, P. A., & Schaefer, E. (2006). Geographic distribution of Pfiesteria spp. (Pfiesteriaceae) in Tasman Bay and Canterbury, New Zealand (2002–03). New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 40(1), 211–220. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288330.2006.9517414
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