Search results for "Prymnesium parvum"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Red sky at night cyanobacteria delight: the role of climate in structuring phytoplankton assemblage in a shallow, Mediterranean lake (Biviere di Gela…

2009

The hypothesis that climate changes may strongly interfere with the peculiar hydrological patterns in the Mediterranean basin and alter the structure of the aquatic biota was tested in a shallow Sicilian lake. A phytoplankton survey, carried out monthly in the brackish and shallow Biviere di Gela, in 2005–2007, revealed a transformation in the structure of its phytoplankton assemblage as compared with similar data collected in 1987–1988. An analysis of the trends followed by precipitation and temperature over the last 40 years, showed reduced water inflows, due to increased air temperature and evapotranspiration rather than to a decrease in the amount of precipitation. A consequent reductio…

Mediterranean climateEcologyAquatic ecosystemAquatic plantSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataPhytoplanktonLittoral zoneEnvironmental scienceBiotaClimate change Functional groups Hydrological deficit Brackish lake Prymnesium parvumAquatic SciencePlanktonWater levelHydrobiologia
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Mixotrophic phytoplankton dynamics in a shallow Mediterranean water body: how to make a virtue out of necessity

2018

Mixotrophy is a combination of photosynthesis and direct access to organic carbon sources, mainly through osmotrophy or phagotrophy. This strategy is adopted by several, phylogenetically distinct, phytoplankton groups and is commonly occurring in marine, brackish and freshwater ecosystems. Traditionally, it has been put in relation to both scarcity of inorganic nutrients and poor light conditions. However, we observed blooms of the mixotrophic, toxic haptophyte Prymnesium parvum in different periods of the year and under variable resources availability. The analysis of a 6.5-year data set of phytoplankton weekly records from a Sicilian shallow lake (Biviere di Gela, south-eastern Sicily) al…

0106 biological sciencesPhototrophBrackish waterbiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyAquatic ScienceBiological interactionbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesFreshwater ecosystemOsmotrophyHaptophyteNutrientPhagotrophyPrymnesium parvumBOD 5Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataPhytoplanktonNutrient availabilityEnvironmental sciencePrymnesium parvumHydrobiologia
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Changes in pigmentation of phytoplankton species during growth and stationary phase — consequences for reliability of pigment-based methods of biomas…

1991

In applied water ecology several methods for estimating the biomass or activity of phytoplankton depend on the proportion of accessory pigments (xanthophylls) to chlorophyll a. Therefore, changes in pigmentation during growth and stationary phase were investigated in four different species (Amphidinium klebsii, Euglena gracilis, Prymnesium parvum, Cryptomonas ovata) typical representatives of the major algal groups. The ratios of the different xanthophylls to chlorophyll a depended not only on the growth phase, but also on the species. InAmphidinium andEuglena, the ratio of xanthophylls to chlorophyll rises continuously during the growth phase and declined during the stationary phase. InPry…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChlorophyll abiologyPlant physiologyPlant ScienceAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPrymnesium parvumXanthophyllChlorophyllPhytoplanktonBotanysense organsChlorophyll fluorescenceAccessory pigmentJournal of Applied Phycology
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