Paper
28 August 2008 Dramatic blooms of Prymnesium sp. and Alexandrium margalefii in the Salton Sea, California
Mary Ann Tiffany, Jennifer Wolny, Matthew Garrett, Karen Steidinger, Stuart H. Hurlbert
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In early 2006, unusual algal blooms of two species occurred in the Salton Sea, a large salt lake in southern California. In mid-January local residents reported bioluminescence in the Sea. Starting in February, large rafts of long-lasting foam, also bioluminescent, were observed as well. Microscopy investigations on water and sediment samples collected in March showed the marine dinoflagellate, Alexandrium margalefii, and the prymnesiophyte, Prymnesium sp., both previously unreported in the Salton Sea, to be abundant. Bioluminescence and foam production continued through March. Other dinoflagellate species, recorded during earlier studies, were rare or not detected during these blooms. Despite the fact that many Alexandrium species are known paralytic shellfish poison (PSP) producers, preliminary saxitoxin tests on this population of A. margalefii were negative. Previous reports on A. margalefii do not mention bioluminescence. It appears that the foam was caused by the Prymnesium sp. bloom, probably via protein-rich exudates and lysis of other algal cells, and its glow was due to entrained A. margalefii. This is the first report of A. margalefii in U.S. waters and the first report of it in a lake.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mary Ann Tiffany, Jennifer Wolny, Matthew Garrett, Karen Steidinger, and Stuart H. Hurlbert "Dramatic blooms of Prymnesium sp. and Alexandrium margalefii in the Salton Sea, California", Proc. SPIE 7097, Instruments, Methods, and Missions for Astrobiology XI, 70970T (28 August 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.800919
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KEYWORDS
Foam

Water

Bioluminescence

Oceanography

Microscopes

Scanning electron microscopy

Glasses

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