Variability in microcystin quotas during a Microcystis bloom in a eutrophic lake
Date
2021-07-21
Type
Journal Article
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Abstract
Microcystis is a bloom-forming genus of cyanobacteria with some genotypes that produce
highly toxic microcystin hepatotoxins. In waterbodies where biological and physical factors
are relatively homogenous, toxin quotas (the average amount of toxin per cell), at a single
point in time, are expected to be relatively constant. In this study we challenged this assumption by investigating the spatial distribution of microcystin quotas at a single point in time on
two separate occasions in a lake with a major Microcystis bloom. Microcystis cell concentrations varied widely across the lake on both sampling occasions (730- and 137-fold) together
with microcystin quotas (148- and 362-fold). Cell concentrations and microcystin quotas
were strongly positively correlated (R² = 0.89, P < 0.001, n = 28; R² = 0.67, P < 0.001, n =
25). Analysis of Microcystis strains using high-throughput sequencing of the 16S-23S rRNA
intergenic spacer region showed no relationship between microcystin quota and the relative
abundance of specific sequences. Collectively, the results of this study indicate an association between microcystin production and cell density that magnifies the potential for bloom
toxicity at elevated cell concentrations.
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