Abstract

Dinoflagellates belonging to the genus Gambierdiscus produce ciguatoxins (CTXs), which are metabolized in fish to more toxic forms and subsequently cause ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP) in humans. Five species of Gambierdiscus have been described from the Canary Islands, where CTXs in fish have been reported since 2004. Here we present new data on the distribution of Gambierdiscus species in the Canary archipelago and specifically from two islands, La Palma and La Gomera, where the genus had not been previously reported. Gambierdiscus spp. concentrations were low, with maxima of 88 and 29 cells·g−1 wet weight in samples from La Gomera and La Palma, respectively. Molecular analysis (LSUrRNA gene sequences) revealed differences in the species distribution between the two islands: only G. excentricus was detected at La Palma whereas four species, G. australes, G. caribaeus, G. carolinianus, and G. excentricus, were identified from La Gomera. Morphometric analyses of cultured cells of the five Canary Islands species and of field specimens from La Gomera included cell size and a characterization of three thecal arrangement traits: (1) the shape of the 2′ plate, (2) the position of Po in the anterior suture of the 2′ plate, and (3) the length–width relationship of the 2″″ plate. Despite the wide morphological variability within the culture and field samples, the use of two or more variables allowed the discrimination of two species in the La Gomera samples: G. cf. excentricus and G. cf. silvae. A comparison of the molecular data with the morphologically based classification demonstrated important coincidences, such as the dominance of G. excentricus, but also differences in the species composition of Gambierdiscus, as G. caribaeus was detected in the study area only by using molecular methods.

Highlights

  • Gambierdiscus is a genus of benthic dinoflagellates that produces ciguatoxins (CTXs) and maitotoxins (MTXs)

  • LSUrRNA gene sequencing of 61 isolates, 3 from La Gomera and 58 from La Palma, showed australes, G. caribaeus, and G. carolinianus, together with two others identified in the Canary that G. excentricus was the only species identified from La Palma, whereas four species, G. australes, Islands

  • Of the 40 Gambierdiscus strains isolated from macrophytes from this last diversity and abundance of this genus in La Gomera and La Palma were determined

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Summary

Introduction

Gambierdiscus is a genus of benthic dinoflagellates that produces ciguatoxins (CTXs) and maitotoxins (MTXs). An objective of the present study was to provide a morphological comparison of the species that have been detected in the Canary Islands and evaluate the extent to which a morphologically based taxonomy can be used in the identification of Gambierdiscus species in the waters of the region. A detailed morphological comparison of nine species was provided by [23] Three of those species were included in the present study, G. australes, G. caribaeus, and G. carolinianus, together with two others identified in the Canary. For a more complete characterization of the biogeography of Gambierdiscus in the Canary archipelago, the diversity and abundance of this genus in La Gomera and La Palma were determined. Islands where this genus has not yet been reported—with the exception of G. excentricus in La Palma, detected during opportunistic sampling (Fraga, unpublished observations)

Results
Epiphytic Dinoflagellate Composition
Morphological Study of Cultured Gambierdiscus Cells
Morphological Study of Field Cells of Gambierdiscus
Gambierdiscus
Geographical
Morphological Study
Comparisons of the Results
Field Sampling and Processing
Cell Enumeration and Light Microscopy
Morphometric Analysis
Field Samples
Statistical Analysis
Full Text
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