0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Ostreopsis cf. ovata Bloom in Currais, Brazil: Phylogeny, Toxin Profile and Contamination of Mussels and Marine Plastic Litter

Toxins 2019 59 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Carlos Eduardo Junqueira de Azevedo Tibiriçá, Isabel do Prado Leite, Talita Batista, Luciano F. Fernandes, Nicolas Chomérat, Fabienne Hervé, Philipp Heß, Luiz Laureno Mafra

Summary

Researchers documented an Ostreopsis cf. ovata harmful algal bloom in Brazil and found that marine plastic litter collected during the bloom was contaminated with the algae and their toxins, suggesting that plastics can serve as vectors for toxic microalgae. The study raises concerns about how floating plastics could spread harmful algal species and their toxins across ocean regions.

Ostreopsis cf. ovata is a toxic marine benthic dinoflagellate responsible for harmful blooms affecting ecosystem and human health, mostly in the Mediterranean Sea. In this study we report the occurrence of a summer O. cf. ovata bloom in Currais, a coastal archipelago located on the subtropical Brazilian coast (~25° S). This bloom was very similar to Mediterranean episodes in many aspects: (a) field-sampled and cultivated O. cf. ovata cells aligned phylogenetically (ITS and LSU regions) along with Mediterranean strains; (b) the bloom occurred at increasing temperature and irradiance, and decreasing wind speed; (c) cell densities reached up to 8.0 × 104 cell cm-2 on fiberglass screen and 5.6 × 105 cell g-1 fresh weight on seaweeds; (d) and toxin profiles were composed mostly of ovatoxin-a (58%) and ovatoxin-b (32%), up to 35.5 pg PLTX-eq. cell-1 in total. Mussels were contaminated during the bloom with unsafe toxin levels (up to 131 µg PLTX-eq. kg-1). Ostreopsis cells attached to different plastic litter, indicating an alternate route for toxin transfer to marine fauna via ingestion of biofilm-coated plastic debris.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

A new look at the potential role of marine plastic debris as a global vector of toxic benthic algae

Researchers examined marine plastic debris as a global vector for toxic benthic algae, finding that floating plastics provide colonization surfaces that may expand harmful algal distribution and intensify toxic blooms across ocean regions.

Article Tier 2

Uncovering the potential effect of microplastics on Alexandrium pacificum: From the perspective of cyst formation and toxin production

Microplastics were found to influence the growth and toxin production of Alexandrium (a harmful algal bloom species), with effects depending on plastic type and concentration. This raises concerns that microplastic pollution could alter the frequency or severity of harmful algal blooms in coastal waters.

Article Tier 2

Plastic-associated harmful phytoplankton assemblages in coastal and off-shore habitats of the Mediterranean Sea

Researchers used qPCR to detect harmful algal bloom species and measure biotoxin concentrations on micro and macroplastic samples collected from coastal and offshore Mediterranean habitats, finding that all plastic samples harbored dinoflagellate and diatom communities including toxin-producing Alexandrium and Pseudo-nitzschia species, with paralytic shellfish toxin levels of 10 to 100 nanograms per square centimeter on plastic surfaces.

Article Tier 2

Microbial diversity and potential pathogens associated with the plastisphere on beaches of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Researchers analyzed the microbes living on plastic debris collected from beaches in Rio de Janeiro, finding that both polypropylene and polyethylene plastics harbored communities containing potential human and marine pathogens as well as bacteria carrying antibiotic resistance genes. The study confirms that ocean plastics can transport dangerous microorganisms across long distances, posing risks to human health and marine biodiversity.

Article Tier 2

First report of detection of Toxoplasma gondii DNA in oysters (Crassostrea sp.) in the state of Maranhão

This study detected Toxoplasma gondii DNA in oysters from a Brazilian coastal state for the first time. Shellfish are already known to accumulate microplastics; this finding illustrates that filter feeders also concentrate other environmental pathogens, compounding the food safety concerns associated with coastal pollution.

Share this paper