Abstract

Prorocentrum donghaiense Lu (also identified as Prorocentrum shikokuense Hada and Prorocentrum obtusidens Schiller) is a bloom-forming dinoflagellate species distributed worldwide. Blooms of P. donghaiense occur annually in adjacent waters of the East China Sea (ECS), especially in the waters near the Changjiang River Estuary. Blooms of this species have also been reported in nearby Japanese and Korean waters. There has been an apparent bloom-forming species succession pattern in the ECS since 2000, with diatom blooms in the early spring, shifting to long-lasting and large-scale dinoflagellate blooms dominated by P. donghaiense during the spring, and finally ended by diatom and/or Noctiluca scintillans blooms in summer. These bloom succession patterns were closely correlated with changes in environmental factors, such as temperature increase and anthropogenic eutrophication. Decreasing silicate by the construction of the Three Gorges Dam and increasing dissolved inorganic nitrogen flux were mainly influenced by high intensity human activities in the Changjiang River watershed, resulting in low Si/N ratio and high N/P ratios, possibly accelerating outbreak of P. donghaiense blooms. Phosphorous deficiency might be the most critical factor controlling the succession of microalgal blooms from diatoms to dinoflagellates. Prorocentrum donghaiense is a nontoxic species, but it can disrupt marine ecosystem by decreasing phytoplankton biodiversity and changing the structure of the food chain. Prorocentrum donghaiense blooms in the ECS have been intensively studied during the last two decades. Several possible mechanisms that contribute or trigger the annual blooms of this species have been proposed, but further research is required particularly on the aspect of nutrient budget, ecosystem impacts, as well as social-economic impact assessment.

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