Critical research is needed regarding
harmful algal blooms threatening
ecosystem and human health, especially through respiratory routes.
Additional complexity comes from the poorly understood factors involved
in the physical production of marine aerosols coupled with complex
biogeochemical processes at ocean surfaces. Hereby using a
marine aerosol generation tankfive bubble-bursting experiments
(with contrasting incubation times and, likely, physiological microalgal
states) were run to investigate simultaneously the concentrations
of the toxins, synthesized by a natural Ostreopsis cf. ovata bloom, in suspension in
the water and in the atmosphere. The first two experiments (EXP1–2)
were run with moderate levels of O. cf. ovata cell numbers (ca. 105 cells·L–1) and total toxin in suspension
(4 × 106 pg·Lwater
–1) obtained at an early phase of the bloom. After 0.75–4 h
incubation, toxin concentration in the aerosols accounted for 49–69
pg·Lair
–1. By striking contrast,
three experiments (EXP3–5)conducted with samples collected
two weeks later with higher cell abundances and higher toxin concentration
in the seston (respectively, about 1 × 106 cells·L–1 and 2 × 108 pg·Lwater
–1) and incubated for 21 hshowed about
15-fold lower atmospheric concentrations (3–4 pg·Lair
–1), while important foam accumulation
was observed in the water surface in the tank. Offline spectroscopic
analysis performed by proton-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
showed that the particulate organic carbon in the water was drastically
different from that of bubble-bursting aerosols from the tank experimentssuggesting
a selective transfer of organic compounds from seawater into the atmosphere.
Overall, the results suggest that aerosol production and diffusion
of marine toxins in the atmosphere are regulated by complex interactions
between biological processes and air-sea aerosol production dynamics.
Analogues of palytoxin (PLTX), one of the most potent marine biotoxins, are produced by some species of the marine dinoflagellates of the genus Ostreopsis. The proliferation of these species in...
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