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Heavy Metals Exacerbate the Effect of Temperature on the Growth of Chlorella sp.: Implications on Algal Blooms and Management

Processes 2022 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Maoyun Yin, Jueqiao Wang, Maoyun Yin, Jueqiao Wang, Lianqi Huang, Zhihao Zhu, Yan Wu Bin Yan, Bin Yan, Hengchang Zhang, Hengchang Zhang, Huan Wang, Lianqi Huang, Lianqi Huang, Huan Wang, Huan Wang, Huan Wang, Huan Wang, Jueqiao Wang, Qiaojuan Lan, Qiaojuan Lan, Jueqiao Wang, Zhihao Zhu, Maoyun Yin, Maoyun Yin, Huan Wang, Zhihao Zhu, Xixi Yan, Chuan Fu, Xixi Yan, Ailing Zhu, Ailing Zhu, Chuan Fu, Chuan Fu, Ailing Zhu, Yan Wu

Summary

Researchers examined the combined effects of heavy metal exposure and elevated temperature on the growth of Chlorella sp., finding that heavy metals exacerbate temperature-driven algal growth responses, with implications for predicting and managing algal bloom occurrence in polluted lakes and reservoirs under climate change.

With the accelerated urbanization and rapid development of the industrial and agricultural sectors, concern about the pollution of water environments is becoming more widespread. Algal blooms of varying sizes are becoming increasingly frequent in lakes and reservoirs; temperatures, nutrients, heavy metals, and dissolved oxygen are the factors that influence algal bloom occurrence. However, knowledge of the combined effect of heavy metals and temperature on algal growth remains limited. Thus, this study investigated how specific concentrations of heavy metals affect algal growth at different temperatures; to this end, two heavy metals were used (0.01 mg/L Pb2+ and 0.05 mg/L Cr6+) at three incubation temperatures (15, 25, and 30 °C) with the alga Chlorella sp. A higher incubation temperature contributed to a rise in soluble proteins, which promoted algal growth. The density of algal cells increased with temperature, and catalase (CAT) decreased with increasing temperature. Chlorella sp. growth and catalase activity were optimal at 30 °C (algal cell density: 1.46 × 107 cell/L; CAT activity: 29.98 gprot/L). Pb2+ and Cr6+ significantly promoted Chlorella sp. growth during incubation at 25 and 30 °C, respectively. At specific temperatures, 0.01 mg/L Pb2+ and 0.05 mg/L Cr6+ promoted the production of soluble proteins and, hence, the growth of Chlorella sp. The results provide a useful background for the mitigation and prevention of algal blooms.

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