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Detected Species

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Contact Us:

[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text css=””]Mihaela D. Enache, Ph.D., Project Manager & Co-PI, Research Scientist I, Division of Science and Research, NJDEP (mihaela.enache@deptest.nj.gov)

Ling Ren, Ph.D., PI, Research Assistant Professor, College of Science, George Mason University (lren2@gmu.edu)[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][vc_column width=”3/4″][vc_column_text css=”.vc_custom_1732301906816{border-bottom-width: 4px !important;border-bottom-style: solid !important;border-color: #5b9bd5 !important;}”]

Prymnesium parvum aka ‘golden alga’

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Unicellular, cells possess two (2) smooth flagella, equal in length, and a haptonema; appear in irregular shape under light microscope (LM).  Cell dimension: 8 to 16 μm in length and 4 to 10 μm in width. Cells contain two golden-brown chloroplasts and abundant fucoxanthin.


Toxins and toxicity

Produce variety of prymnesins, reported to have ichthyotoxic, neurotoxic, hemolytic, and cytotoxic properties. The toxins can cause death of gill-breathing organisms such as fish, mussels, and larval amphibians, by destroying the selective permeability of gills (Roelke & Manning, 2018; Wagstaff et al., 2021).


Ecology

Photosynthetic, but a strong mixotroph. They are able to “kill and eat” many of their competitors and predators, which in turn enables near-monospecific blooms. Cell production is stimulated by inorganic nutrient enrichment. In contrast, nitrogen or phosphorus limitation can enhance toxin production and/or release. Blooms usually develop under suboptimal conditions (i.e., lower temperatures and salinities).


Distribution and Occurrence

Cosmopolitan, tolerate salinity 1 to > 35 ppt, and temperatures 2 to 32 °C. It was observed that the population of P. parvum can be decimated quickly by grazers, within 1-2 days. In this study, the species was abundant in OMWM-1 in December, and exceedingly abundant (8.5 x105 cells/mL) in PGD-2 in April.


References

Roelke, D. L., and S. R. Manning. 2018. Harmful Algal Species Fact Sheet: Prymnesium parvum (Carter) “Golden Algae,” p. 629–632. In S.E. Shumway, J.M. Burkholder, and S.L. Morton [eds.], Harmful Algal Blooms. Wiley. doi:10.1002/9781118994672.ch16q

Wagstaff, B. A. and others. 2021. Assessing the Toxicity and Mitigating the Impact of Harmful Prymnesium Blooms in Eutrophic Waters of the Norfolk Broads. Environ. Sci. Technol. 55: 16538–16551. doi:10.1021/acs.est.1c04742


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