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Toxic marine phytoplankton, zooplankton grazers, and pelagic food webs: The ecology and oceanography of harmful algal blooms
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Toxic marine phytoplankton, zooplankton grazers, and pelagic food webs: The ecology and oceanography of harmful algal blooms

J. T Turner and P. A Tester
Limnology and oceanography, Vol.42(5), pp.1203-1214
1997

Abstract

Animal, plant and microbial ecology Applied ecology Biological and medical sciences Ecotoxicology, biological effects of pollution Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology Marine and brackish environment

Interactions between toxic phytoplankton and their zooplankton grazers are complex. Some zooplankters ingest some toxic phytoplankters with no apparent harm, whereas others are deleteriously affected. Phycotoxins vary in their modes of action, levels of toxicity and solubility, and affect grazers in different ways. Beyond effects on direct grazers, toxins may accumulate in and be transferred through marine food webs, affecting consumers at higher trophic levels, including fish, seabirds, and marine mammals. Grazers of toxic phytoplankton include protists as well as metazoans, and the impact of zooplankton grazing on development or termination of toxic blooms is poorly understood. In most interactions of toxic phytoplankters with grazers and other marine food-web components, outcomes are situation-specific, and extrapolation of results from one set of circumstances' to another may be inappropriate.

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