Distribution of the fish-killing dinoflagellate Karlodinium (Dinophyceae) in the
Johor Strait, Malaysia
Fig. 1. Sampling sites in the Johor Strait
Species of Karlodinium are naked dinoflagellates. More than one third of the
named species have been known to
cause fish mortality. Toxigenic Karlod-
inium species have gained notoriety due
to their capability of producing ichthyotoxins (karlotoxins) that damage the
fish gill epithelial tissues causing mor-
Fig. 2. Spatial and temporal distribution of Karlodinium along the Johor Strait during the
study period between January 2018 and September 2019
Fig. 3. Light micrographs of Karlodinium found in the Johor Strait. Scale bar = 20 μm.
14
talities by suffocation [1]. In this study,
the spatial and temporal distribution of
the dinoflagellate Karlodinium in the Johor Strait was investigated. The strait is
a narrow waterway that separates Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore (Fig. 1)
and is an important aquaculture area
for both countries. Blooms of Karlodinium australe previously reported in
the western Johor Straits have led to
massive caged-fish mortality and serious economic losses in 2014 and 2015
[2-4].
A total of 19 stations along the Johor
Strait were sampled during plankton
monitoring surveys between January
2018 and September 2019 (Fig. 1). Karlodinium species were present in the
Strait but at low cell densities ranging
from 2 x 102 to 5.5 x 103 cells L-1 (Fig. 2).
The average cell density of K. australe
recorded during the 2014 bloom was
1.25 106 cells L-1, with a maximum
(2.34 106 cells L-1) recorded at the innermost part of the Strait [2]. Densities
of Karlodinium exceeding 5,000 cells L-1
were observed in October 2017 (S18),
FebruaryApril 2019 (S4, S17, and
S18), and July 2019 (S14). Results from
a Spearmans rank correlation revealed
that phosphate (PO4-P) availability in
the Strait was significantly correlated
with high abundances of Karlodinium (p
< 0.05). It has been suggested that the
2014 bloom was probably triggered by
high nutrients input from the nearby
river discharges and anthropogenic inputs from mariculture, coastal reclamation and dredging activities in the Strait
[2]. The stagnant water conditions
during neap tides also contributed to
sustain the bloom [2]. This view is supported by Leong et al [5] who showed
that dinoflagellates blooms including K.
cf. veneficum and K. australe in the Eastern Johor Strait occurred during neap
tides with high nitrogen but low silicate
concentrations. Diatoms were likely
suppressed under silicate depletion,
allowing the dinoflagellates to thrive
in that environment, and subsequently
prolong their bloom development in the
Strait [5-6].
Under the light microscope (LM),
cells of Karlodinium appear oval with
epicone and hypocone equal in size.
The shape of the epicone is conical or
rounded while the hypocone is hemispherically rounded (Fig. 3A) and the
Continued on page 16
HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS NO. 65 / 2020
Harmful Algae News An IOC Newsletter on Toxic Algae and Algal Blooms No. 65 - September 2020 www.ioc-unesco.org/hab Genomic resources for the domoic acid-producing diatom Pseudo-nitzschia multistriata Species responsible for Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) are among the best studied unicellular microa
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Pim and Calusa Waterkeepers for assistance in sampling. References 1. Metcalf JS et al (in press). Neurotox Res 2. Matthiensen et al 2000. In: de Koe WJ et al (eds), Mycotoxins and Phycotoxins in Perspective at the Turn of the Millenium. Proc Xth Int IUPAC symposium on Mycotoxins and Phycotoxins, Gu
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Distribution of the fish-killing dinoflagellate Karlodinium (Dinophyceae) in the Johor Strait, Malaysia Fig. 1. Sampling sites in the Johor Strait Species of Karlodinium are naked dinoflagellates. More than one third of the named species have been known to cause fish mortality. Toxigenic Karlod-
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Fig. 3 Bayesian trees of Akashiwo sanguinea inferred from (A) LSU rDNA and (B) ITS datasets. Values on nodes represent bootstrap supports of MP, ML, and posterior probabilities of BI Continued from page 14 sulcus extension invading the epicone is visible (Fig. 3B). Cells are slightly pigmented, wi
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