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Seasonal shifts in chemotype composition of Microcystis sp. communities in the pelagial and the sediment of a shallow reservoir
Author(s) -
Welker Martin,
Šejnohová Lenka,
Némethová Danka,
Döhren Hanšvon,
Jarkovský Jiří,
Maršálek Blahoslav
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
limnology and oceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 1939-5590
pISSN - 0024-3590
DOI - 10.4319/lo.2007.52.2.0609
Subject(s) - chemotype , microcystis , pelagic zone , benthic zone , biology , microcystin , plankton , cyanobacteria , bloom , ecology , botany , bacteria , genetics , essential oil
The various oligopeptides produced by individual Microcystis clones enable the classification of individual colonies of Microcystis in distinct peptide chemotypes. The dynamics and diversity of coexisting chemotypes are regarded as major factors influencing the microcystin‐content of blooms of this potentially toxic cyanobacterial genus. We compared the chemotype composition in planktonic and benthic Microcystis communities in Brno reservoir (Czech Republic) from July to November 2004 by single‐colony mass spectrometry (n = 783). Ninety‐two peptides were selected to characterize 37 chemotypes as revealed by K‐means clustering. In the course of the season the Microcystis community became significantly less diverse (linear regression of Shannon indices, p < 0.001) in the pelagic, and in November two chemotypes—both of which did not contain microcystins—accounted for nearly 80% of the colonies. In contrast, other chemotypes that were dominant in the pelagic in July were no longer encountered after August, whereas some chemotypes that never accounted for high relative abundances were encountered throughout the season. The shift to some few dominant chemotypes in the pelagic was also reflected by changes in the benthic community where the same chemotypes increased in relative abundances. Nonetheless, chemotypes were identified in the sediment in July and November that were never found in plankton samples. A principal component analysis revealed that communities in the pelagial and the benthal were very different in July but converged during the season because of the deposition of dominant planktonic chemotypes in the sediment. In accordance with the declining percentage of toxin‐producing Microcystis colonies, the microcystin content of seston samples decreased significantly from 0.9 mg g ‐1 dry weight to levels below the detection limit (linear regression, p < 0.001).

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