Abstract

Abstract Our study focused on ciliates grazing potential against harmful algal blooms, because ciliates are considered as voracious feeders of toxic phytoplankton and major herbivores in marine food webs. Ciliates are major contributors to control the flux of harmful algal blooms by lessen the magnitude of their biomass from top to bottom by high consumption on these blooms. Keeping an eye on harmful algal blooms as common pollutant of marine ecosystem the community-based method was used to test the potential effects of two harmful algal species Alexandrium tamarense and Gymnodinum catenatum on the community patterns of the ciliates. For this purpose, the 14-day (mature) samples of ciliate communities were collected using glass slides as an artificial substratum at a depth of 1 m in coastal waters of the Yellow Sea, northern China. A series of algal cell concentrations of both species was prepared as 100 (control), following 102, 103, 104 and 105 cell ml−1, respectively. The study results indicated that both algal species showed strong effects on the community patterns of the ciliates at high concentration. Species abundance, relative species number and taxonomic distinctness indices of ciliate communities generally increased by increasing the concentration whereas, sharply decreased at the concentration level of (105 cells ml−1) for both algal species. Canonical analysis of principal coordinates demonstrated the variations in community structures of the ciliates driven by the concentrations of both algal species. Ellipse test showed an increased pattern in species departure from an expected breadth of species contour with increasing the algal cell concentrations. Based on our findings, it is suggested that extended studies on community-based bioassay is a valuable tool to strengthen the information about the effects of microalgae on the ciliate community structures.

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