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Flow cytometry and pigment analyses as tools to investigate the toxicity of herbicides to natural phytoplankton communities.
Mar Environ Res. 2004 Aug-Dec; 58(2-5):353-8.ME

Abstract

Characterisation of natural phytoplanktonic communities is currently being advanced through flow cytometry and high resolution pigment analyses. To date, toxicological methods to assess impacts of herbicides on natural phytoplankton populations are lacking. Here, we report the novel use of these techniques in combination to study changes in phytoplankton populations exposed to 2-methylthio-4-tertiary-butylamino-6-cyclopropylamino-s-triazine (Irgarol 1051), a herbicide used in antifouling paints. Flow cytometry results revealed that following a 72-h exposure to approximately 100 ngL(-1), eukaryote abundance was less than half that in the controls. High performance liquid chromatographic analyses of pigments demonstrated that 19'-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin was selectively lost relative to the control. This carotenoid is specific to the prymnesiophytes which are key constituents of phytoplanktonic communities within temperate marine waters. Values of EC(50) (72 h) as low as 70 ngL(-1) were calculated from the selective reduction in this compound. Concentrations substantially exceeding this level have been reported in UK and other European coastal waters.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, West Hoe, Plymouth, Devon PL1 3DH, UK. jwre@pl.ac.ukNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15178054

Citation

Readman, J W., et al. "Flow Cytometry and Pigment Analyses as Tools to Investigate the Toxicity of Herbicides to Natural Phytoplankton Communities." Marine Environmental Research, vol. 58, no. 2-5, 2004, pp. 353-8.
Readman JW, Devilla RA, Tarran G, et al. Flow cytometry and pigment analyses as tools to investigate the toxicity of herbicides to natural phytoplankton communities. Mar Environ Res. 2004;58(2-5):353-8.
Readman, J. W., Devilla, R. A., Tarran, G., Llewellyn, C. A., Fileman, T. W., Easton, A., Burkill, P. H., & Mantoura, R. F. (2004). Flow cytometry and pigment analyses as tools to investigate the toxicity of herbicides to natural phytoplankton communities. Marine Environmental Research, 58(2-5), 353-8.
Readman JW, et al. Flow Cytometry and Pigment Analyses as Tools to Investigate the Toxicity of Herbicides to Natural Phytoplankton Communities. Mar Environ Res. 2004 Aug-Dec;58(2-5):353-8. PubMed PMID: 15178054.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Flow cytometry and pigment analyses as tools to investigate the toxicity of herbicides to natural phytoplankton communities. AU - Readman,J W, AU - Devilla,R A, AU - Tarran,G, AU - Llewellyn,C A, AU - Fileman,T W, AU - Easton,A, AU - Burkill,P H, AU - Mantoura,R F C, PY - 2004/6/5/pubmed PY - 2004/8/31/medline PY - 2004/6/5/entrez SP - 353 EP - 8 JF - Marine environmental research JO - Mar Environ Res VL - 58 IS - 2-5 N2 - Characterisation of natural phytoplanktonic communities is currently being advanced through flow cytometry and high resolution pigment analyses. To date, toxicological methods to assess impacts of herbicides on natural phytoplankton populations are lacking. Here, we report the novel use of these techniques in combination to study changes in phytoplankton populations exposed to 2-methylthio-4-tertiary-butylamino-6-cyclopropylamino-s-triazine (Irgarol 1051), a herbicide used in antifouling paints. Flow cytometry results revealed that following a 72-h exposure to approximately 100 ngL(-1), eukaryote abundance was less than half that in the controls. High performance liquid chromatographic analyses of pigments demonstrated that 19'-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin was selectively lost relative to the control. This carotenoid is specific to the prymnesiophytes which are key constituents of phytoplanktonic communities within temperate marine waters. Values of EC(50) (72 h) as low as 70 ngL(-1) were calculated from the selective reduction in this compound. Concentrations substantially exceeding this level have been reported in UK and other European coastal waters. SN - 0141-1136 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15178054/Flow_cytometry_and_pigment_analyses_as_tools_to_investigate_the_toxicity_of_herbicides_to_natural_phytoplankton_communities_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -