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Introduction
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Publications
Publications (118)
Selection of suitable genotypes from diverse seed banks may help phytoplankton populations to cope with environmental changes. This study examines whether the high genotypic diversity found in the Baltic cyst pool of the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii is coupled to phenotypic variability that could aid short term adaptation. Growth ra...
Aim
To test if a phytoplankton bloom is panmictic, or whether geographical and environmental factors cause spatial and temporal genetic structure.
Location
Baltic Sea.
Method
During four cruises, we isolated clonal strains of the diatom Skeletonema marinoi from 9 to 10 stations along a 1132 km transect and analysed the genetic structure using eig...
Genetic diversity is considered an important factor, stabilizing ecological functions when organisms are faced with changing environmental conditions. Although well known from terrestrial systems, documentations of this relationship from marine organisms, and particularly planktonic microorganisms, are still limited. Here we experimentally tested t...
Eukaryotic phytoplankton exhibit an enormous species richness, displaying a range of phylogenetic, morphological and physiological diversity. Yet, until recently, very little was known about the diversity, genetic variation and evolutionary processes within species and populations. An approach to explore this diversity and to understand evolution o...
Using resurrection experiments with resting stages from living sediment archives, it is possible to investigate whether adaptation occurred. For this study, we revived resting cysts of the spring bloom dinoflagellate Apocalathium malmogiense from recent and 100-year-old sediment layers from the Gulf of Finland, and compared temperature-dependent tr...
Global warming is a major threat to marine biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, with consequences that are yet largely unknown. To frame these consequences, we need to understand how marine ecosystems respond to warming and related environmental changes. Ecosystem models have proven to be a valuable tool in this respect, but their projections va...
In 2023, a series of inflow events affected the environmental conditions in the different basins of the western Baltic Sea. Traces of a cold, saline inflow in December 2022 were still visible in the bottom water of the Arkona Basin during February. In early summer, a baroclinic inflow build a thick bottom layer of saline water in the Belt Sea and r...
Little is known about the genetic diversity and stability of natural populations over millennial time scales, although the current biodiversity crisis calls for heightened understanding. Marine phytoplankton, the primary producers forming the basis of food webs in the oceans, play a pivotal role in maintaining marine ecosystems health and serve as...
Dormancy is a wide-spread key life history trait observed across the tree of life. Many plankton species form dormant cells stages that accumulate in aquatic sediments and under anoxic conditions, form chronological records of past species and population dynamics under changing environmental conditions. Here we report on the germination of a micros...
Cyanobacterial blooms in the Baltic Sea proliferated in recent decades due to rising sea surface temperatures, resulting in significant ecological impacts. To elucidate their current success, we examined ecophysiological, biochemical, and morphological traits of recent and ~33-year-old strains of Nodularia spumigena using a resurrection approach. T...
Global warming is a major threat to marine biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, with consequences that are yet largely unknown. To frame these consequences, we need to understand how marine ecosystems respond to warming and related environmental changes. Ecosystem models have proven to be a valuable tool in this respect, but their projections va...
In the Baltic Sea, the dinoflagellates Apocalathium malmogiense, Biecheleria baltica, and Gymnodinium corollarium are important contributors to the spring bloom. However, their relative contribution to the bloom community cannot be unambiguously determined by conventional light microscopy due to a lack of resolution of distinctive morphological fea...
Marginal sea ecosystems, such as the Baltic Sea, are severely affected by anthropogenic pressures, such as climate
warming, pollution, and eutrophication, which increased in the course of the past century. Biodiversity monitoring
data and assessment of environmental status in such systems have typically been carried out only for the
past few decade...
Sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) offers an important opportunity for investigating long‐term community dynamics. Nevertheless, sedaDNA is challenging since DNA is degraded and fragmented over time. Of particular interest for such sedaDNA studies are phytoplankton communities, which are sensitive environmental indicators and important producers in...
This is a technical guide for monitoring the taxonomic diversity of phytoplankton
using environmental DNA metabarcoding, together with conventional phytoplankton
monitoring techniques in marine and brackish waters. The guidelines focus on the
detection of eukaryotic and prokaryotic phytoplankton with 18S and 16S rRNA
primers, using high-throughput...
A new chytrid genus and species was isolated and cultured from samples obtained in the Baltic Sea during a dinoflagellate bloom event. This species is characterized by having a spherical sporangium without papillae and zoospores of 2–3 µm in diameter that are released through 3 discharge pores. Molecular phylogeny based on ribosomal operon showed i...
The salinity gradient separating marine and freshwater environments represents a major ecological divide for microbiota, yet the mechanisms by which marine microbes have adapted to and ultimately diversified in freshwater environments are poorly understood. Here, we take advantage of a natural evolutionary experiment: the colonization of the bracki...
Dissolved and particulate organic carbon (DOC, POC) and nitrogen (DON, PON) constitute essential nutrient and energy sources to heterotrophic microbes in aquatic systems. Especially in the shallow coastal ocean, the concentrations are highly variable on short timescales, and cycling is heavily affected by different sources and environmental drivers...
Recommendations to frame
problems and solutions for
the pelagic habitats’
assessment
Cyanobacteria of the order Nostocales, including Baltic Sea bloom-forming taxa Nodularia spumigena, Aphanizomenon flosaquae , and Dolichospermum spp., produce resting stages, known as akinetes, under unfavorable conditions. These akinetes can persist in the sediment and germinate if favorable conditions return, simultaneously representing past bloo...
Many fungi have been identified as pathogens of marine algae. Among them, Chytridiomycota have been revealed as relatively highly abundant, but much of the diversity known within these groups is almost entirely based on environmental sequencing data. Here, we present a novel chytridiomycete genus and species, characterized by light microscopical ob...
Perkinsea are a group of intracellular protist parasites that inhabit all types of aquatic environments and cause significant population declines of a wide variety of hosts. However, the diversity of this lineage is mostly represented by environmental rDNA sequences. Complete descriptions of Perkinsea that infect marine dinoflagellates have increas...
In 2019, a total of 150 phytoplankton species were recorded on the 5 annual monitoring cruises reported here, marking high species diversity comparable to previous years. The phytoplankton production cycle was characterized by an early onset of the spring bloom and higher phytoplankton biomass than measured in 2018, particularly in the southern Bal...
A recently published study analyzed the phylogenetic relationship between the genera Centrodinium and Alexandrium, confirming an earlier publication showing the genus Alexandrium as paraphyletic. This most recent manuscript retained the genus Alexandrium, introduced a new genus Episemicolon, resurrected two genera, Gessnerium and Protogonyaulax, an...
DNA can be preserved in marine and freshwater sediments both in bulk sediment and in intact, viable resting stages. Here, we assess the potential for combined use of ancient, environmental, DNA and timeseries of resurrected long-term dormant organisms, to reconstruct trophic interactions and evolutionary adaptation to changing environments. These n...
A recently published study analyzed the phylogenetic relationship between the genera Centrodinium and Alexandrium, confirming an earlier publication showing the genus Alexandrium as paraphyletic. This most recent manuscript retained the genus Alexandrium, introduced a new genus Episemicolon, resurrected two genera, Gessnerium and Protogonyaulax, an...
In the Baltic Sea, the dinoflagellates Apocalathium malmogiense , Biecheleria baltica , and Gymnodinium corollarium are important contributors to the spring bloom. However, their relative contribution to the bloom community cannot be unambiguously determined by conventional light microscopy due to lack of resolution of distinctive morphological fea...
Dating to 1979, the HELCOM time series on species composition, biomass and abundance of phyto- and zooplankton as well as macrozoobenthos from Kiel Bay to the Eastern Gotland Basin was continued in 2018.
The phytoplankton spring bloom was well developed in the mid of March in the Belt Sea as a diatom bloom (Skeletonema marinoi, Thalassiosira spp.),...
The impact of synoptic scale and mesoscale variability on the Lagrangian residence time (LRT) of the surface water in the Bay of Gdańsk was investigated using the results from an eddy-resolving model. The computed LRT of 53–60 days was up to four times longer than the estimated flushing time reported by Witek et al. (2003). The highest residence ti...
In seasonal environments, strong gradients of environmental parameters can shape life cycles of phytoplankton. Depending on the rate of environmental fluctuation, specialist or generalist strategies may be favored, potentially affecting life cycle transitions. The present study examined life cycle transitions of the toxin producing Baltic dinoflage...
Blooms of Alexandrium spp. are a well-known phenomenon in Northern European waters. While A. tamarense/catenella, and A. pseudogonyaulax have been reported from marine waters, high densities of A. ostenfeldii are mainly observed at lower salinities in North Sea estuaries and the Baltic Sea, suggesting salinity as a driver of Alexandrium species com...
Sexual reproduction plays a fundamental role in diatom life cycles. It contributes to increasing genetic diversity through meiotic recombination and also represents the phase where large-sized cells are produced to counteract the cell size reduction process that characterizes these microalgae. With the aim to identify genes linked to the sexual pha...
Environmental conditions regulate the germination of phytoplankton resting stages. While some factors lead to synchronous germination, others stimulate germination of only a small fraction of the resting stages. This suggests that habitat filters may act on the germination level and thus affect selection of blooming strains. Benthic “seed banks” of...
Due to its crucial role in the ecosystem, phytoplankton is incorporated in marine ecosystem models. Most models however neglect the evolutionary potential of phytoplankton. Previous resurrection experiments with a spring bloom dinoflagellate suggest that the past century of global warming has caused an adaptive response in an important life cycle t...
In recent years, blooms of toxic Alexandrium ostenfeldii strains have been reported from around the world. In 2013, the species formed a red tide in a shallow lagoon in western Japan, which was the first report of the species in the area. To investigate the genetic relatedness of Japanese A. ostenfeldii and global isolates, the full-length SSU, ITS...
Phytoplankton and bacteria interactions have a significant role in aquatic ecosystem functioning. Associations can range from mutualistic to parasitic, shaping biogeochemical cycles and having a direct influence on phytoplankton growth. How variations in phenotype and sampling location, affect the phytoplankton microbiome is largely unknown. A high...
In the last two decades the toxic dinoflagellate A. ostenfeldii has started to form dense recurrent blooms in shallow waters of the Baltic Sea, which are exposed to strong gradients of temperature, light and nutrients. Such gradients are known to impact the life cycle of other temperate phytoplankton, but specific triggers for cyst formation and ge...
The Baltic Sea is affected by a range of human induced environmental pressures such as eutrophication. Here we synthesize the ongoing shift from diatom dominance toward more dinoflagellates in parts of the Baltic Sea during the spring bloom and its potential effects on biogeochemical cycling of key elements (e.g., C, N, and P). The spring bloom is...
Intraspecific trait diversity can promote the success of a species, as complementarity of functional traits within populations may enhance its competitive success and facilitates resilience to changing environmental conditions. Here, we experimentally determined the variation and relationships between traits in 15 strains of the toxic dinoflagellat...
Most microalgal species are geographically widespread, but little is known about how they are dispersed. One potential mechanism for long‐distance dispersal is through birds, which may transport cells internally (endozoochory) and deposit them during, or in‐between, their migratory stopovers. We hypothesize that dinoflagellates, in particular resti...
Recently radiated dinoflagellates Apocalathium aciculiferum (collected in Lake Erken, Sweden), A. malmogiense (Baltic Sea) and Apocalathium aff. malmogiense (Highway Lake, Antarctica) represent a lineage with an unresolved phylogeny. We determined their phylogenetic relationships using phylotranscriptomics based on 792 amino acid sequences. Our res...
The history of expansion of bloom-forming cold water dinoflagellates in the Northern Baltic Sea was studied using 100-year-old sediment archives of their resting cysts. Vertical cyst distributions of Biecheleria baltica and Apocalathium malmogiense, two dinoflagellates indistinguishable by light microscopy and not recognized as distinct species in...
Phytoplankton is the basis for aquatic food webs and mirrors the water quality. Conventionally, phytoplankton analysis has been done using time consuming and partly subjective microscopic observations, but next generation sequencing (NGS) technologies provide promising potential for rapid automated examination of environmental samples. Because many...
Recurring toxic A. ostenfeldii blooms are tightly coupled to benthic resting cysts in shallow coastal waters of the Baltic Sea. This study investigates the role of seed banks in genotype dynamics during one bloom season. We hypothesize that the cyst populations are genetically more diverse than temporal vegetative subpopulations which might contrib...
Marine planktonic microalgae have potentially global dispersal, yet reduced gene flow has been confirmed repeatedly for several species. Over larger distances (>200 km) geographic isolation and restricted oceanographic connectivity have been recognized as instrumental in driving population divergence. Here we investigated whether similar patterns,...
The toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii is the only bioluminescent bloom-forming phytoplankton in coastal waters of the Baltic Sea. We analysed partial luciferase gene (lcf) sequences and bioluminescence production in Baltic A. ostenfeldii bloom populations to assess the distribution and consistency of the trait in the Baltic Sea, and to e...
In temperate systems, phytoplankton spring blooms deplete inorganic nutrients and are major sources of organic matter for the microbial loop. In response to phytoplankton exudates and environmental factors, heterotrophic microbial communities are highly dynamic and change their abundance and composition both on spatial and temporal scales. Yet, mos...
Alexandrium ostenfeldii is present in a wide variety of environments in coastal areas worldwide and is the only dinoflagellate known species that produces paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins and two types of cyclic imines, spirolides (SPXs) and gymnodimines (GYMs). The increasing frequency of A. ostenfeldii blooms in the Baltic Sea has been...
A saxitoxin (STX) proficiency test (PT) was organized as part of the Establishment of Quality Assurance for the Detection of Biological Toxins of Potential Bioterrorism Risk (EQuATox) project. The aim of this PT was to provide an evaluation of existing methods and the European laboratories’ capabilities for the analysis of STX and some of its analo...
Kolkwitziella acuta is a cyst-forming dinoflagellate with a unique tabulation, occurring in freshwater to brackish environments of Eurasia and the USA. Based on the unique thecal plate arrangement, this species was previously interpreted as a missing link in the evolution between the genus Protoperidinium and the Diplopsalioideae. We isolated livin...
Here it is reported the first detection of DV-chl a together with the usual chl a in the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii from the Baltic Sea. Growth response and photosynthetic parameters were examined at two irradiances (80 and 240 μmol photons ·m(-2 ·) s(-1) ) and temperatures (15° and 19 °C) in a divinylic strain (AOTV-OS20) vs a m...
Ocean Sampling Day was initiated by the EU-funded Micro B3 (Marine Microbial Biodiversity, Bioinformatics, Biotechnology) project to obtain a snapshot of the marine microbial biodiversity and function of the world’s oceans. It is a simultaneous global mega-sequencing campaign aiming to generate the largest standardized microbial data set in a singl...
Fig. S2
structure plot for the Baltic Sea only (K = 3) suggesting southern populations (GK, YS) are genetically differentiated from northern populations.
Table S1 Summary of N (sample size), Na (number of alleles per population per loci), expected (He) and observed (Ho) heterozygosity and Brookfield null allele frequencies (a) in all populations across eight genotyped loci. Heterozygote deficiency after Bonferroni correction, P < 0.05*.
Table S2 Correlation between directional relative migration and oceanographic connectivity was also tested over multiple generations based on stepping stone dispersal.
Fig. S1 Oceanographic connectivity measured as the minimum connectivity over 16 generations and visualized as the connectivity between Lysekil (North Sea) and to all other stations.
Drivers of population genetic structure are still poorly understood in marine micro-organisms. We exploited the North Sea-Baltic Sea transition for investigating the seascape genetics of a marine diatom, Skeletonema marinoi. Eight polymorphic microsatellite loci were analysed in 354 individuals from ten locations to analyse population structure of...
Drivers of population genetic structure are still poorly understood in marine microorganisms. We exploited the North Sea-Baltic Sea transition for investigating the seascape genetics of a marine diatom, Skeletonema marinoi. Eight polymorphic microsatellite loci were analyzed in 354 individuals from ten locations to analyze population structure of t...
Diatoms and dinoflagellates are major bloomforming
phytoplankton groups competing for resources in
the oceans and coastal seas. Recent evidence suggests that
their competition is significantly affected by climatic factors
under ongoing change, modifying especially the conditions
for cold-water, spring bloom communities in temperate
and Arctic regio...
Alexandrium ostenfeldii is a globally distributed dinoflagellate species capable of producing several potent toxins. Blooms of this species are presently expanding, pos-sibly as a result of changing environmental conditions or recent spreading of geographically distant populations. Population genetic analyses are a useful tool to investigate invasi...
The cryptomonad Rhinomonas nottbecki n. sp., isolated from the Baltic Sea, is described from live and fixed cells studied by light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy together with sequences of the partial nucleus- and nucleomorph-encoded 18S rRNA genes as well as the nucleus-encoded ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2, and the 5'-end of the 28S rRNA gene...
Like many other dinoflagellate species, Alexandrium fundyense possesses a benthic resting cyst which enables long-term persistence and annual blooms of this species in the Gulf of Maine. The size and extent of these harmful algal blooms are associated with high cyst concentrations in the top 1 cm of sediment. Despite the importance of this resting...
Abstract Bioaccumulation of paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) produced by the dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii was investigated in the northern Baltic Sea. The study was based on the assumption that the toxins released during high magnitude blooms of A. ostenfeldii will accumulate in the biota at the bloom site, especially in bivalves. To tes...
Daily patterns of stimulated bioluminescence were recorded throughout an Alexandrium ostenfeldii bloom at a remote shallow site in the Finnish Archipelago Sea. Transect measurements showed highly localized bioluminescence
prior to the bloom peak. High bioluminescence, corresponding to peak dinoflagellate biomass, lasted 15 days in mid-August.
Large...
Alexandrium ostenfeldii (Paulsen) Balech and Tangen and A. peruvianum (Balech and B.R. Mendiola) Balech and Tangen are morphologically closely related dinoflagellates known to produce potent neurotoxins. Together with Gonyaulax dimorpha Biecheler, they constitute the A. ostenfeldii species complex. Due to the subtle differences in the morphological...
Studies of predator-prey systems in both aquatic and terrestrial environments have shown that grazers structure the intraspecific diversity of prey species, given that the prey populations are phenotypically variable. Populations of phytoplankton have traditionally considered comprising only low intraspecific variation, hence selective grazing as a...
The life cycle research of the past years has revealed an unexpectedly high diversity of reproduction and survival strategies. Dinoflagellate life cycles often seem to be plastic, i.e. different pathways and mechanisms may be complementary in one and the same species. The diversity of life cycle stages, strategies and regulation mechanisms will hav...
Blooms of dinoflagellates are frequently observed in coastal regions.
The dynamics of these blooms are strongly affected by life cycle
transitions. For example, many species form resting cysts at the end of
the growth period that act as a seed population. Despite considerable
efforts, one major process of the dinoflagellate life cycle - the
encystm...
Spring bloom composition in the Baltic Sea, a partially ice-covered brackish coastal waterbody, is shaped by winter-spring weather conditions affecting the relative dominance of diatoms and a heterogeneous assemblage of cold-water dinoflagellates, dominated by the chain-forming Peridiniella catenata and a complex of at least three medium-sized, sin...
The cold-water dinoflagellate Biecheleria baltica has increasingly dominated the phytoplankton spring bloom in the Baltic Sea during the past years. Life cycle transitions
between bloom forming cells and resting cysts are assumed to regulate the bloom dynamics of this species. We investigate the
seasonal cycle and succession of Biecheleria baltica'...
This study investigates the genetic structure of an eukaryotic microorganism, the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii, from the Baltic Sea, a geologically young and ecologically marginal brackish water estuary which is predicted to support evolution of distinct, genetically impoverished lineages of marine macroorganisms. Analyses of the in...
Phytoplankton populations can display high levels of genetic diversity that, when reflected by phenotypic variability, may stabilize a species response to environmental changes. We studied the effects of increased temperature and CO(2) availability as predicted consequences of global change, on 16 genetically different isolates of the diatom Skelet...
Vehmaa, A., Kremp, A., Tamminen, T., Hogfors, H., Spilling, K., and Engström-Öst, J. 2012. Copepod reproductive success in
spring-bloom communities with modified diatom and dinoflagellate dominance. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 69: 351–357.
Dinoflagellates have increased and diatoms decreased in the Baltic Sea in recent decades, possibly becau...
In the past years, some coastal areas in the central and northern Baltic Sea have experienced recurrent blooms of the potentially toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii. The population dynamics and spatial distribution of the species were studied in the Fo¨ glo¨ archipelago, a bloom area in Åland, northern Baltic Sea. During a two-year survey...
Phytoplankton populations can display high levels of genetic diversity that, when reflected by phenotypic variability, may stabilize a species response to environmental changes. We studied the effects of increased temperature and CO2 availability as predicted consequences of global change, on 16 genetically different isolates of the diatom Skeleton...
Dinoflagellate-dominated spring blooms are globally uncommon, but they regularly occur and are even increasing in the Baltic Sea, varying interannually in importance with diatom-dominated blooms. The success of dinoflagellates in the spring phytoplankton community has remained poorly understood, as they are expected to be inferior competitors due t...
Dense localized blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii are a recent phenomenon in the low salinity waters of the Baltic Sea. This study reports results from laboratory experiments investigating the interaction between PSP toxin producing strains of A. ostenfeldii and two copepod species, Eurytemora affinis and Acartia bifilosa,...
The algal spring bloom in the Baltic Sea represents an anomaly from the winter-spring bloom patterns worldwide in terms of frequent and recurring dominance of dinoflagellates over diatoms. Analysis of approximately 3500 spring bloom samples from the Baltic Sea monitoring programs revealed (i) that within the major basins the proportion of dinoflage...
Cold-water dinoflagellates frequently dominate the spring phytoplankton community of the northern Baltic Sea and contribute substantially to the spring primary production. These dinoflagellate communities are largely composed of 3 different species (Biecheleria baltica, Scrippsiella hangoei, Gymnodinium corollarium) that cannot be unambiguously sep...
Mertens, K. N., Dale, B., Ellegaard, M., Jansson, I.-M., Godhe, A., Kremp, A. & Louwye, S. 2010: Process length variation in cysts of the dinoflagellate Protoceratium reticulatum, from surface sediments of the Baltic–Kattegat–Skagerrak estuarine system: a regional salinity proxy. Boreas, 10.1111/j.1502-3885.2010.00193.x. ISSN 0300-9483.
Results are...
A PCR-based assay was developed and applied to sediment and sediment trap samples for the detection of different cysts belonging to dinoflagellates and raphidophytes in European coastal areas. Oligonucleotide primers were designed based on the ITS-5.8S and LSU ribosomal gene sequences. The specificity and sensitivity of the PCR assay were assessed...
We estimated silicate uptake kinetics for 8 spring diatom species using a model based on time series measurements of the depletion of dissolved silicate (DSi) and increases in biomass. Furthermore, the carbon: nitro-gen: silicate stoichiometric relationships and maximum growth rates were determined. Differences in DSi uptake kinetics and maximum gr...