Cryptic occurrence of Chattonella marina var. marina in mangrove sediments in Probolinggo,East Java Province,Indonesia |
| |
Authors: | Ayu-Lana-Nafisyah Endang-Dewi-Masithah Kazumi Matsuoka Mirni-Lamid Mochammad-Amin-Alamsjah Shizuka O-hara Kazuhiko Koike |
| |
Affiliation: | 1.Graduate School of Biosphere Science,Hiroshima University,Higashi-hiroshima, Hiroshima,Japan;2.Faculty of Fisheries and Marine,Universitas Airlangga,Surabaya,Indonesia;3.Institute for East China Sea Research,Nagasaki University,Nagasaki,Japan |
| |
Abstract: | Mangrove forests and adjacent creeks are known to be highly productive estuaries, which are partly supported by benthic microalgae that grow on the sediments. During surveys investigating the microalgal floras of mangrove swamps in the eastern part of Java Island, a mud sample unexpectedly included large numbers of a notorious fish killer, Chattonella-like motile cells, and its resting cysts. These motile cells were established as clonal cultures for further identification and physiological tests. The cysts were examined through palynological and molecular biological means. Identification based on light microscopy and ribosomal RNA gene sequences confirmed that these cells and cysts were Chattonella marina var. marina. While the strains were genetically identical to the temperate strains isolated from Japan and China, temperature experiments showed that the Indonesian strains possessed a high maximum quantum yield of photosystem II even after exposure to 34 °C, a temperature at which the Japanese strain could not survive. Salinity experiments showed adaptation of the strains to a salinity of 15. These findings, together with the discovery of populations of cysts in the mangrove sediment, highlight the tough and unique nature of the Indonesian strains, which are likely adapted to wide fluctuations of temperature and salinity in mangrove swamps, and pose a potential risk to fisheries in Indonesia. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|