Mesocosm study of PAC-modified clay effects on Karenia brevis cells and toxins, chemical dynamics, and benthic invertebrate physiology

•MC II removed K. brevis cells but was less effective at toxin removal than expected.•MC II removed dissolved and particulate phosphorus from the water column.•MC II significantly reduced pH and alkalinity over the 72-hour observation period.•Lethal and sublethal measures in animals were unaffected...

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Veröffentlicht in:Harmful algae 2024-04, Vol.134, p.102609, Article 102609
Hauptverfasser: Devillier, Victoria M., Hall, Emily R., Lovko, Vince, Pierce, Richard, Anderson, Donald M., Lewis, Kristy A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•MC II removed K. brevis cells but was less effective at toxin removal than expected.•MC II removed dissolved and particulate phosphorus from the water column.•MC II significantly reduced pH and alkalinity over the 72-hour observation period.•Lethal and sublethal measures in animals were unaffected by MC II treatment.•Effectiveness of MC II may be impacted by factors affecting particle collision. Modified clay compounds are used globally as a method of controlling harmful algal blooms, and their use is currently under consideration to control Karenia brevis blooms in Florida, USA. In 1400 L mesocosm tanks, chemical dynamics and lethal and sublethal impacts of MC II, a polyaluminum chloride (PAC)-modified kaolinite clay, were evaluated over 72 h on a benthic community representative of Sarasota Bay, which included blue crab (Callinectes sapidus), sea urchin (Lytechinus variegatus), and hard clam (Mercenaria campechiensis). In this experiment, MC II was dosed at 0.2 g L-1 to treat bloom-level densities of K. brevis at 1 × 106 cells L-1. Cell removal in MC II-treated tanks was 57% after 8 h and 95% after 48 h. In the water column, brevetoxin analogs BTx-1 and BTx-2 were found to be significantly higher in untreated tanks at 24 and 48 h, while in MC II-treated tanks, BTx-3 was found to be higher at 48 h and BTx-B5 was found to be higher at 24 and 48 h. In MC II floc, we found no significant differences in BTx-1 or BTx-2 between treatments for any time point, while BTx-3 was found to be significantly higher in the MC II-treated tanks at 48 and 72 h, and BTx-B5 was higher in MC II-treated tanks at 24 and 72 h. Among various chemical dynamics observed, it was notable that dissolved phosphorus was consistently significantly lower in MC II tanks after 2 h, and that turbidity in MC II tanks returned to control levels 48 h after treatment. Dissolved inorganic carbon and total seawater alkalinity were significantly reduced in MC II tanks, and partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) was significantly higher in the MC II-only treatment after 2 h. In MC II floc, particulate phosphorus was found to be significantly higher in MC II tanks after 24 h. In animals, lethal and sublethal responses to MC II-treated K. brevis did not differ from untreated K. brevis for either of our three species at any time point, suggesting MC II treatment at this dosage has negligible impacts to these species within 72 h of exposure. These results appear promising in terms of the environmental safety of
ISSN:1568-9883
1878-1470
1878-1470
DOI:10.1016/j.hal.2024.102609