Chemical and Physical Factors Influencing Toxin Content

  • Granéli E
  • Flynn K
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Abstract

Many isolates of the same species display qualitatively similar toxin profiles supporting the view that toxin production is heritable, at least for PSP toxin producers (see Cembella and John, Chap. 17). It is not known, however, why some phytoplankton species produce toxins while most do not, or perhaps more perplexing,why some strains of the same species are toxic while others are not. One may expect that if it were advantageous, all strains of the same species would display similar levels of toxicity and they may also be expected to be toxic most of the time. It is even possible that at least some algae do not produce toxins themselves, but that toxin production is caused by intracellu- lar bacteria (Kodama 1990, cited in Granéli et al. 1998, see also Chap. 19). Toxin production can also be stimulated by the presence of grazers (Pohnert et al. 2002). Algal toxins are secondary metabolites that vary in structure, atomic com- position, and functional activity.Thus, it is not surprising that factors stimu- lating toxin production in one algal species/group may have a different impact on another. This chapter considers the factors affecting the accumula- tion of toxins. In Chap. 17,Cembella and John consider this topic at the mole- cular and genetic level,and phase of cell cycle,while here we focus on interac- tions between the growth stage (lag, exponential and stationary phases) and physico-chemical environmental factors.

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Granéli, E., & Flynn, K. (2006). Chemical and Physical Factors Influencing Toxin Content. In Ecology of Harmful Algae (pp. 229–241). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-32210-8_18

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