• Title/Summary/Keyword: marine harmful micro algae

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Application of FITC-conjugated lectin probes for the recognition and differentiation of some Korean coastal red tide microalgae

  • Cho Eun Seob;Seo Gwi Moon;Lee Sam Geun;Kim Hak Gyoon;Lee Sang Jun;Rhodes Lesley L.;Hong Yong-Ki
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.1 no.2
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    • pp.250-254
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    • 1998
  • Harmful micro algae isolated from Korean coastal waters, were tested with FITC-conjugated lectins and observed by epifluorescent microscopy to distinguish each other. Strain-specific sugar composition at the cell surface was suggested by the affinity of lectins to different microalgae. The micro algae Cochlodinium polykrikoides (CP-1) and Gymnodinium $A_3\;(GA_{3-1}\;1)$, are morphologically similar, but exhibited different binding activity with the lectins ECA, HPA and WGA. In Peridiniales, the micro alga Alexandrium tamarense (AT) bound HPA and WGA, but Scrippsiella trochoidea (ST-1) did not bind those lectins. Three species of Prorocentrum also exhibited different binding specificity with HPA, PHA and SBA. A non­toxic Korean isolate of Heterosigma akashiwo (HA-2) bound ConA, PEA and UEA. These results suggest that lectins are useful in discriminating morphologically similar species, as well as different species or strains within the same genus.

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Isolation of Marine Bacteria Killing Red Tide Microalgae I. Isolation and Algicidal Properties of Micrococcus sp. LG-1 Possessing Killing Activity for Harmful Dinoflagellate, Cochlodinium polykrikoides (적조생물 살조세균 탐색 I. 유해 적조생물 Cochlodinium Polykrikoides 살조세균 Micrococcus sp. LG-1의 분리와 살조특성)

  • PARK Young-Tae;PARK Ji-Bin;CHUNG Seong-Youn;Song Byung-Chul;LIM Wol-Ae;KIM Chang-Hoon;LEE Won-Jae
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.31 no.5
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    • pp.767-773
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    • 1998
  • In this study, we have investigated the distributions and killing effects of marine bacteria that tend to kill the red tide microalgae, C. polykikoides in the area of Masan bay from June to October, 1996. To summarize, C. polykikoides killing bacteria were detected at $10^2$ to $10^3$ cells/ml of seawater samples during the survey period, and the bloom was observed in September by containing $4.8\times10^3$cells/ml. It appears however that the number of these bacteria is decreased ($2.0\times10^2$cells/ml) in October, A total of 110 strains were isolated from seawater samples and seawater filtrate (pore size, 0.8 $\mu$m)-containing mixed culture of C. polykikoides in which the mixed culture was grown in f/2 medium. As results we have successfully isolated Micrococcus sp. LG-1 which decreased to less than 10cells/ml within 6days and 5days sfter inoculation of Micrococcus sp. LG-1 into the la9 and logarithmic growth phases of C. polykrikoides respectively. Therefore, it appears that inoculation of Micrococcus sp. LG-1 against the logarithmic C. polykrikoides is more effective than the lag growth phase, (n addition, the killing effects were increased in accordance with bacterial cell densities inoculated in a dose dependent manner. Especially, the filtrate of kitling bacterium culture (nore size, 0.2 $\mu$m) revealed a dramatic effect in which C. polykrikoides were decreased to less than 10 cells/mf of culture within 1 hr, 1,5 hrs, 1,5 hrs, 3.5 hrs. and 5,5 hrs after inoculations of the culture filtrate with concentration of $30\%,\;20\%,\;10\%,\;5\%$ and $2.5\%$, respectively. Moreover Micrococcus sp. LG-1 showed a selective specificity against C. polykrikoides and any other killing effects of Micrococcus sp. LG-1 were not observed against Alexandrium tamarense, Prorocentrum micans, Scrippsiella trochoidea. ana Gymnodinium sanguineum.

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