Title: Cyanobacteria Blooms:
1Cyanobacteria Blooms Effects on Aquatic
Communities
Karl E. Havens University of Florida /
IFAS Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
March 2007 US-China Harmful Cyanobacteria Workshop
2Recent Microcystis blooms in the USA
Lake Okeechobee, FL (Summer 2005)
St. Johns River, FL (Summer 2005)
What impacts do these event have on the aquatic
biota?
3EVENT
DIRECT EFFECT
POTENTIAL IMPACT
- Light limitation plants, epiphyton, benthic
algae, phytoplankton
Reduced Transparency
- Sub-lethal and lethal impacts
- to fish populations
Elevated pH
BLOOM FORMATION
- Altered competitive interactions
- among phytoplankton
Reduced CO2
- Impacts on zooplankton grazing and food web
efficiency
Increased Algal Size
- Allelopathy, sub-lethal and lethal toxic
effects on fish, zooplankton,
macro-invertebrates, wading birds, other aquatic
vertebrates
Toxin Production
Hypoxia / Anoxia
BLOOM COLLAPSE
- Fish kills, sub-lethal and lethal impacts on
other biota
Ammonia
4Community Impacts - 1 Plants and Alternative
States
5Stabilizing processes
Alternative
States
6Community Impacts - 2 Plankton Food Webs
7Effects on grazing zooplankton
- Mechanical interference
- Toxic effects
- P limitation at high CP ratios
Results in
- Reduced growth rates
- Reduced fecundity
- Reduced longevity
- Increased mortality
- Large Daphnia most sensitive
- Food web effects
8Size
Zooplankton
Phytoplankton
Nutrients
9Gliwicz, Z.M. 1969. Studies on the feeding of
pelagic zooplankton in lakes with varying
trophy. Ekologia Polska 17 663-708.
10Hillbricht-Ilkowska, A. 1977. Trophic relations
and energy flow in pelagic plankton. Polish
Ecological Studies 3 3-98.
11Lake Okeechobee (from Work, Havens and East 2005,
J. Plankton Res.)
During an Anabaena circinalis bloom
With small Lyngbya limnetica dominance
12Lake Okeechobee response of plankton food web
(ugC/L) to NP after 6-day incubation with
Cylindrospermopsis dominance
13Lake Okeechobee response of plankton food web
(ugC/L) to NP after 6-day incubation with diatom
and small Lyngbya dominance
14Community Impacts - 3 Benthic Communities
15Potentially Impacted by CHAB
Palmer, M.A., A.P. Covich, S. Lake et al. 2000.
Linkages between aquatic sediment biota And life
above sediments as potential drivers of
biodiversity and ecological processes. BioScience
50 1062-1075.
16Community Impacts - 4 Direct and Indirect
Effects of Toxins
17Some Documented Effects of Cyanobacterial Toxins
- Suppression of zooplankton grazing (Gilbert 1990)
- Allelopathy on other phytoplankton (Suikkanen et
al. 2004) - Hepatotoxic effects on fish (Ernst et al. 2001)
- Renal failure in fish (Kotak et al. 1996)
- Inhibition of fish gill Na/K-ATPase activity
(Bury et al. 1998) - Accumulation in copepod body tissues and fecal
pellets and potential for accumulation in higher
trophic levels in plankton and benthos
(Lehtiniemi et al. 2002) - Accumulation in crayfish tissues and potential
for transfer to higher trophic levels (Liras et
al. 1998) - Mass mortality of ducks reported during a
Microcystis bloom in Japan (Matsunaga et al. 1999)
Most results from controlled lab experiments
and toxic effects occurred at high doses of toxins
18Common Themes
- Use of purified microcystin LR in many studies
little work with other congeners of MS or other
toxins - Single species experiments with ideal conditions
are the norm little work with natural stressors - Lack of consideration of behavioral or
physiological modulation - Lack of consideration of effects of simultaneous
or sequential exposure to different toxins - Greater biotic response to crude cell lysates
than pure toxins not well understood, but other
cell components suspected (e.g., LPS, capsule) - Few studies at community level
- Insufficient information about biomagnification
although results to date suggest it does not
occur for MS
19Synthesis / Information Gaps
20HAB
Toxins
Other Effects
Individual and Population Effects Effects of
chronic vs. acute and episodic exposures Exposure
with other stressors (low DO, NH4,
etc.) Effects on physiology, pathology,
genotoxicity, behavior, reproduction
Cyanotoxin Exposure Single vs. multiple or
sequential toxin exposures Presence of other
bioactive compounds
Community and Ecosystem Responses Dependent on
direct and indirect effects of toxins Dependent
on the many other impacts of blooms