A Red Tide of Gyrod Inium Aurelum in Sea Lochs of the Firth of Clyde and Associated Mortality of Pond-Reared Salmon
- 1 February 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
- Vol. 62 (4), 771-782
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0025315400070326
Abstract
Red tides of the naked dinoflagellate Gyrodinium aureolum Hulburt occurred in sealochs in the north of the Firth of Clyde, Scotland, during late September 1980. Greatestconcentrations of the organism were found in the top 1 m layer of the water column, which was stabilized, and probably also enriched with nutrients, by freshwater input fromland drainage. In addition vertical and horizontal concentration must be postulated toexplain Gyrodinium cell densities of 2 x to7 cells I"1 and chlorophyll concentrations of 2228 mg m“”3 near the shore at Otter Ferry, Loch Fyne.On 28 September 1980, water containing the red tide at Otter Ferry was unintentionally pumped into fish ponds at a shore-based salmon farm and resulted in the death, in one pond, of 3000 salmon each weighing about 1 kg and of 200–300 smolts in another when water was transferred to it from the affected pond. Pathological investigation of affected salmon showed that death was likely to have resulted from asphyxiation and osmotic shock as a result of extensive cellular damage to gills and guts. Results of mouse bioassays, using acidic and ether extracts of flesh and guts from affected salmon, suggest that necrotizing toxin(s) was associated with the cells of Gyrodinium aureolum during the bloom. The clinical signs exhibited by mice injected with toxin extracts were, however, unlike those caused by paralytic shellfish poison or toxins of the Gymnodinium breve type.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The distribution of dinoflagellates around the british isles in july 1977: a multivariate analysisJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1980
- The dinoflagellae bloom on the coast of south west England, August-September 1978Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1979
- The effects of vertical stability on phytoplankton distributions in the summer on the northwest European ShelfDeep Sea Research, 1978
- The General Annual Cycle of Chlorophyll Standing Crop in Loch CreranJournal of Ecology, 1978
- Blooms ofGyrodinium aureolum(Dinophygeae) in North European waters, accompanied by mortality in marine organismsSarsia, 1977
- Observations on blooms of the dinoflagellateGyrodinium aureolumHulburt in the River Conwy and its occurrence along the North Wales coastBritish Phycological Journal, 1973
- The use of log-normal statistics to describe phytoplankton populations from the Firth of Lorne areaJournal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 1973
- Gymnodinium blooms in the Helgoland bight (North Sea) during August, 1968Helgoland Marine Research, 1971
- INFLUENCE OF HUMIC SUBSTANCES ON THE GROWTH OF MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON: DINOFLAGELLATES1Limnology and Oceanography, 1968
- THE TAXONOMY OF UNARMORED DINOPHYCEAE OF SHALLOW EMBAYMENTS ON CAPE COD, MASSACHUSETTSThe Biological Bulletin, 1957