Fishes (Aug 2024)

Are <i>Alexandrium catenella</i> Blooms Spreading Offshore in Southern Chile? An In-Depth Analysis of the First PSP Outbreak in the Oceanic Coast

  • Patricio A. Díaz,
  • Sergio A. Rosales,
  • Carlos Molinet,
  • Edwin J. Niklitschek,
  • Andrés Marín,
  • Daniel Varela,
  • Miriam Seguel,
  • Manuel Díaz,
  • Rosa I. Figueroa,
  • Leila Basti,
  • Cristina Hernández,
  • Pamela Carbonell,
  • Bárbara Cantarero,
  • Gonzalo Álvarez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes9090340
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 9
p. 340

Abstract

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The blooms of Alexandrium catenella, the main producer of paralytic shellfish toxins worldwide, have become the main threat to coastal activities in Southern Chile, such as artisanal fisheries, aquaculture and public health. Here, we explore retrospective data from an intense Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning outbreak in Southern Chile in Summer–Autumn 2016, identifying environmental drivers, spatiotemporal dynamics, and detoxification rates of the main filter-feeder shellfish resources during an intense A. catenella bloom, which led to the greatest socio-economic impacts in that area. Exponential detoxification models evidenced large differences in detoxification dynamics between the three filter-feeder species surf clam (Ensis macha), giant barnacle (Austromegabalanus psittacus), and red sea squirt (Pyura chilensis). Surf clam showed an initial toxicity (9054 µg STX-eq·100 g−1) around 10-fold higher than the other two species. It exhibited a relatively fast detoxification rate and approached the human safety limit of 80 µg STX-eq·100 g−1 towards the end of the 150 days. Ecological implications and future trends are also discussed. Based on the cell density evolution, data previously gathered on the area, and the biology of this species, we propose that the bloom originated in the coastal area, spreading offshore thanks to the resting cysts formed and transported in the water column.

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