4.7 Article

Cyanobacterial community succession and associated cyanotoxin production in hypereutrophic and eutrophic freshwaters

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 290, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.118056

Keywords

Cyanobacteria; Cyanotoxin; Nutrients; Community succession; Eutrophic freshwaters; Hypereutrophic freshwaters

Funding

  1. United States Environmental Protection Agency, through its Office of Research and Development's (ORD's) research program: Safe and Sustainable Water Resources (SSWR: SSWR 4.3.1)
  2. United States Environmental Protection Agency, through its Office of Research and Development's (ORD's) research program: Safe and Sustainable Water Resources (SSWR: SSWR 4.3.3)

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This study provides a comprehensive review of the impact of different eutrophic scenarios on cyanobacterial community succession and cyanotoxin production. It highlights the key roles of temperature, nitrogen fixation, and nitrogen and phosphorus levels in regulating cyanobacterial communities and toxin production in freshwater bodies.
Cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cyanoHABs) in freshwater bodies are mainly attributed to excess loading of nutrients [nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P)]. This study provides a comprehensive review of how the existing nutrient (i.e., N and P) conditions and microbial ecological factors affect cyanobacterial community succession and cyanotoxin production in freshwaters. Different eutrophic scenarios (i.e., hypereutrophic vs. eutrophic conditions) in the presence of (i) high levels of N and P, (ii) a relatively high level of P but a low level of N, and (iii) a relatively high level of N but a low level of P, are discussed in association with cyanobacterial community succession and cyanotoxin production. The seasonal cyanobacterial community succession is mostly regulated by temperature in hypereutrophic freshwaters, where both temperature and nitrogen fixation play a critical role in eutrophic freshwaters. While the early cyanoHAB mitigation strategies focus on reducing P from water bodies, many more studies show that both N and P have a profound contribution to cyanobacterial blooms and toxin production. The availability of N often shapes the structure of the cyanobacterial community (e.g., the relative abundance of N-2-fixing and non-N-2-fixing cyanobacterial genera) and is positively linked to the levels of microcystin. Ecological aspects of cyanotoxin production and release, related functional genes, and corresponding nutrient and environmental conditions are also elucidated. Research perspectives on cyanoHABs and cyanobacterial community succession are discussed and presented with respect to the following: (i) role of internal nutrients and their species, (ii) P- and N-based control vs. solely P-based control of cyanoHABs, and (iii) molecular investigations and prediction of cyanotoxin production.

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