New Knowledge on Distribution and Abundance of Toxic Microalgal Species and Related Toxins in the Northwestern Black Sea

Toxins (Basel). 2022 Oct 6;14(10):685. doi: 10.3390/toxins14100685.

Abstract

Numerous potentially toxic plankton species commonly occur in the Black Sea, and phycotoxins have been reported. However, the taxonomy, phycotoxin profiles, and distribution of harmful microalgae in the basin are still understudied. An integrated microscopic (light microscopy) and molecular (18S rRNA gene metabarcoding and qPCR) approach complemented with toxin analysis was applied at 41 stations in the northwestern part of the Black Sea for better taxonomic coverage and toxin profiling in natural populations. The combined dataset included 20 potentially toxic species, some of which (Dinophysis acuminata, Dinophysis acuta, Gonyaulax spinifera, and Karlodinium veneficum) were detected in over 95% of the stations. In parallel, pectenotoxins (PTX-2 as a major toxin) were registered in all samples, and yessotoxins were present at most of the sampling points. PTX-1 and PTX-13, as well as some YTX variants, were recorded for the first time in the basin. A positive correlation was found between the cell abundance of Dinophysis acuta and pectenotoxins, and between Lingulodinium polyedra and Protoceratium reticulatum and yessotoxins. Toxic microalgae and toxin variant abundance and spatial distribution was associated with environmental parameters. Despite the low levels of the identified phycotoxins and their low oral toxicity, chronic toxic exposure could represent an ecosystem and human health hazard.

Keywords: Black Sea; light microscopy; metabarcoding; phycotoxins; toxic microalgae.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Black Sea
  • Dinoflagellida* / genetics
  • Ecosystem
  • Humans
  • Marine Toxins / analysis
  • Marine Toxins / toxicity
  • Microalgae*

Substances

  • Marine Toxins

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the European Space Agency (ESA) within the 2nd Call for Outline Proposals under the Plan for European Cooperating States (PECS) in Bulgaria, Contract № 4000123951/18/NL/SC—project Bio-optics for ocean color remote sensing of the Black Sea and Horizon 2020 Framework Programme—H2020-BG-2018-2020, Contract number 101000240—project Innovation to Co-Develop Blue Growth within Resilient Ecosystems, and partly by the Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung (AWI) through the Research Programme “Changing Earth-Sustaining our Future” of the Helmholtz Society and by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific 420 Research (Kiban-B) by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (21H02274). The authors acknowledge support by the Open Access Publication Funds of AWI.