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Mitigating fish-killing algal blooms: clay revisited to remove ichthyotoxins

conference contribution
posted on 2023-05-23, 10:21 authored by Andreas SegerAndreas Seger, Dorantes-Aranda, JJ, Muller, MN, Park, TG, Place, AR, Gustaaf HallegraeffGustaaf Hallegraeff
Previously we demonstrated effective removal of Prymnesium parvum toxicity towards the gill cell line RTgill-Wl by Phoslock™ clay and have since worked on refining clay type and dosage. In this work we explored 12 commercially available Australian clays (two zeolites, four kaolins, six bentonites) and two types of Korean yellow loess for removal of Prymnesium toxicity towards the gill cells under differing pH conditions. At pH 7, gill cell viability improved slightly after treatment with kaolins and zeolites (22- 26% viability increase), with bentonite clays and Phoslock™ performing best (up to 57% viability increase). Korean loess proved unsuitable for removing ichthyotoxins. However, at pH 9, kaolin, loess and zeolite exacerbated ichthyotoxicity and toxin removal by Phoslock TM was significantly reduced (9% viability increase vs. 57% at pH 7). Interestingly, bentonites completely removed Prymnesium ichthyotoxicity at pH 9, thus suggesting their potential as rapid response tools during high density (high pH) fish-killing algal bloom events. Additional screening against other fish-killing algae revealed that bentonite clay could only partly remove Alexandrium catenella and Chattonella marina ichthyotoxins, whereas complete removal of P. parvum and Karlodinium veneficum toxicity was achieved at clay loadings between 0.05-0.25 g L-1.

Funding

Australian Research Council

History

Publication title

Marine and Fresh-water Harmful Algae: Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Harmful Algae

Editors

A Lincoln MacKenzie

Pagination

214-217

ISBN

978-87-990827-5-9

Department/School

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies

Publisher

Nelson, New Zealand

Place of publication

Cawthron Institute

Event title

16th International Conference on Harmful Algae

Event Venue

Wellington, New Zealand

Date of Event (Start Date)

2014-10-27

Date of Event (End Date)

2014-10-31

Rights statement

Copyright unknown

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Fisheries - aquaculture not elsewhere classified

Usage metrics

    University Of Tasmania

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