Publications by authors named "Rencheng Yu"

Large-scale Phaeocystis globosa blooms in the Beibu Gulf have adversely affected marine ecosystems and the functioning of a nuclear power plant. To understand the formation mechanisms for such large-scale blooms, we examined the P. globosa bloom dynamics in the northern Beibu Gulf from September 2015 to March 2016 in association with changes in phytoplankton community and environmental factors.

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Article Synopsis
  • Species of Karenia are linked to harmful algal blooms that negatively impact fisheries, ecosystems, and human health, and reports of these blooms have increased over the past two decades due to newly recognized species.
  • A study used high-throughput sequencing in the eastern Chinese coastal seas to investigate the diversity and distribution of Karenia, finding many known and unknown species, with K. mikimotoi being common in colder waters during autumn and across the major waters in spring.
  • The research indicated that sea temperatures significantly influenced the distribution of Karenia species, while inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus were not major factors; it suggests that ocean warming and coastal eutrophication contribute to the proliferation of harmful blooms.
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Discharges of CO and nutrients by anthropogenic activities have notable contributions to CO enrichment and eutrophication in coastal systems. Following our previous study that toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum will increase their growth rate and cellular toxicity under elevated levels of CO, we further examined the joint effects of CO enrichment and excess nitrogen supply through a 29-day experiment under three CO levels (400, 800 and 1200 ppm) with a high N/P ratio of 80. It was found that the two factors have synergistical effects in promoting the increase of cellular toxicity.

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The strong western Pacific boundary current of the Kuroshio significantly affects the oceanographic and ecological processes of the East China Sea through its branches. To understand the seasonal variation of Kuroshio intrusion and its ecological effects, 10 cruises were conducted from February 2015 to January 2016 in the waters adjacent to the Changjiang River estuary to collect hydrological data and abundances of phytoplankton assemblages of Prochlorococcus (Pro), Synechococcus (Syn) and picoeukaryotes. High salinity bottom water representing the Nearshore Kuroshio Branch Current (NKBC) appeared in the spring, peaked in the summer, and then almost disappeared at the end of the autumn.

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In the coastal waters around Shandong peninsula, an unprecedented winter bloom of dinoflagellates Gonyaulax polygramma and Akashiwo sanguinea occurred in 2021 from late November to early December. The bloom affected a wide area of coastal waters extending from west to east along the northern Shandong peninsula and had a devastating blow to the kelp cultivation industry. Based on the remote-sensing data, the initiation of the bloom was traced back to the region adjacent to the mouth of the Yellow River in Laizhou Bay, where enhanced freshwater discharge from the Yellow River was recorded from September to November.

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The Beibu Gulf has experienced blooms of Phaeocystis globosa "giant colony" ecotype (PGGCE), with noticeable variations in bloom scale across years. However, driving environmental factors and their roles remain poorly understood. In this study, we quantified dynamics of PGGCE cells in 2016-2017 and 2018-2019, and analyzed their correlations with environment factors.

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Paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) produced by some marine dinoflagellates can cause severe human intoxication via vectors like bivalves. Toxic dinoflagellate Gymnodinium catenatum produce a novel group of hydroxybenzoate PSTs named GC toxins, but their biokinetics in bivalves haven't been well examined. In this experiment, we analyzed PSTs in bay scallops Argopecten irradians exposed to G.

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Gonyautoxins (GTXs), a group of potent neurotoxins belonging to paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs), are often associated with harmful algal blooms of toxic dinoflagellates in the sea and represent serious health and ecological concerns worldwide. In the study, a highly selective and sensitive fluorescence nanoprobe was constructed based on photoinduced electron transfer recognition mechanism to rapidly detect GTXs in seawater, using specific entrapment of molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) combined with fluorescence analyses. The green emissive fluorescein isothiocyanate was grafted in a silicate matrix as a signal transducer and fluorescence intensity of the nanoprobe with a core-shell structure exhibited a strong enhancement due to efficient analyte blockage in a short response time.

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A three-year field study at a mussel (Mytilus edulis) aquaculture site in Ship Harbour, Nova Scotia, Canada was carried out between 2004 and 2006 to detect toxic phytoplankton species and dissolved lipophilic phycotoxins and domoic acid. A combination of plankton monitoring and solid phase adsorption toxin tracking (SPATT) techniques were used. Net tow and pipe phytoplankton samples were taken weekly to determine the abundance of potentially toxic species and SPATT samplers were deployed weekly for phycotoxin analysis.

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Recently, dinoflagellate blooms have frequently occurred in the coastal waters of Fujian, East China Sea. In June 2022, a fish-killing bloom of Kareniaceae species occurred in this region. In this study, four species of Kareniaceae, namely, Karenia longicanalis, K.

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Environmental factors play an important role in the lipid, protein, and carbohydrate compositions of microalgae, wherein temperature and light are key influencing factors. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometry was used in this study to detect biomacromolecules in cells under different temperatures (10, 15, 20, and 25 °C) and different illumination conditions (1000, 2000, 3000, and 4000 lx) to study the corresponding changes in lipid, protein, and carbohydrate contents. Results indicate that the biomacromolecule content at different temperatures has different patterns.

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The Bohai Sea, a semi-enclosed inland sea in China and an important mariculture region, has experienced extensive harmful algal blooms (HABs) and their negative impacts for several decades. To investigate the changes of HABs and their potential drivers over time and space, a dataset of 230 HAB events (1952-2017), along with corresponding environmental data (1990-2017) was compiled. The frequency of HAB events in the Bohai Sea has increased over time but plateaued in the last decade, and our analysis showed that history of HABs in the Bohai Sea could be categorized into three periods based on their frequency, scale, and HAB-forming species.

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Brown tides caused by the pelagophyte Aureococcus anophagefferens have frequently occurred in the Bohai Sea since 2009 and have led to a dramatic collapse of the local scallop culture. To determine why brown tides occurred in the Bohai Sea rather than in other eutrophic coastal waters of China, phytoplankton communities and nutrients were evaluated and nutrient addition experiments were conducted in the Qinhuangdao coastal area. The concentration of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) was nearly five times higher than that of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) during brown tides.

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A massive green tide occurred in the Southern Yellow Sea (SYS) in 2021. As in previous years, its high biomass caused trouble to the coastal environment and landscape in 2021. Unusually, the 2021 green tide was unexpectedly massive.

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The dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium comprises most of the toxic bloom-forming species producing paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) in the sea. Recently, repeated paralytic shellfish poisoning episodes have been recorded in Qinhuangdao located at the west coast of the Bohai Sea. To elucidate the relationship between toxic Alexandrium blooms and the poisoning episodes, a year-round investigation was carried out in this region from July 2020 to July 2021.

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Harmful algal blooms (HABs) worldwide are experiencing obvious changes under the combined impacts of global warming, eutrophication, and other driving forces. In the East China Sea (ECS), large-scale blooms caused by dinoflagellates occurred since 2000 and there has been an apparent shift of bloom-causative microalgae from diatoms to dinoflagellates. To predict the future evolution of HABs in this region, a model was developed based on the competition between diatoms and dinoflagellates, which would serve to reproduce the seasonal succession of microalgal blooms driven by multiple environmental factors.

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The bloom-forming dinophyte Alexandrium minutum comprises biogeographic inferred, global and Pacific clades with both toxic and nontoxic strains reported. A. minutum has a wide distribution in the Western Pacific, but to date only a few strains have available DNA sequences.

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The haptophyte Phaeocystis globosa, an important causative agent of harmful algal blooms globally, exhibits varying morphological and physiological features and high genetic diversity, yet the relationship among these has never been elucidated. In this study, colony sizes and pigment profiles of 19 P. globosa isolates from the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans were determined.

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Since 1990s, harmful algal blooms (HABs) of Kareniaceae, primarily caused by species of Karenia and Karlodinium and rarely by Takayama species, have been substantially increasing in frequency and duration in the coastal waters of China. In this study, we recorded a bloom of high abundance of T. acrotrocha in the Haizhou Bay, the Yellow Sea in September 2020, which is the first record of a Takayama bloom in the temperate coastal waters of China.

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Ocean acidification caused by increasing emission of carbon dioxide (CO) is expected to have profound impacts on marine ecological processes, including the formation and evolution of harmful algal blooms (HABs). We designed a set of experiments in the laboratory to examine the effects of increasing CO on the growth and toxicity of a toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum producing paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs). It was found that high levels of CO (800 and 1200 ppm) significantly promoted the growth of A.

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Dinoflagellate Gymnodinium catenatum is an important producer of paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs), including a novel group of hydroxybenzoate derivatives named GC toxins. In the East China Sea, G. catenatum has been considered as the causative agent for several paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) episodes, yet the knowledge on their toxin production was still quite limited.

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Harmful algal blooms formed by fast-growing, ephemeral macroalgae have expanded worldwide, yet there is limited knowledge of their potential ecological consequences. Here, we select intense green tides formed by in the Yellow Sea, China, to examine the ecological consequences of these blooms. Using 28-isofucosterol in the surface sediment as a biomarker of green algae, we identified the settlement region of massive floating green algae in the area southeast of the Shandong Peninsula in the southern Yellow Sea.

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Marine phycotoxins associated with paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP), diarrhetic shellfish poisoning (DSP), amnesic shellfish poisoning (ASP), neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP), ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP), tetrodotoxin (TTX), palytoxin (PLTX) and neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) have been investigated and routinely monitored along the coast of China. The mouse bioassay for monitoring of marine toxins has been progressively replaced by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), which led to the discovery of many new hydrophilic and lipophilic marine toxins. PSP toxins have been detected in the whole of coastal waters of China, where they are the most serious marine toxins.

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Over the last 30 years, harmful algal blooms (HABs) have occurred frequently in the coastal waters of China, resulting in financial losses of over 5.9 billion yuan (about 0.87 billion US dollars) due to massive fish and shellfish mortalities and negative impacts on tourism.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates large-scale blooms of the haptophyte Phaeocystis globosa in the Beibu Gulf, focusing on their distribution and dynamics between September 2016 and August 2017.
  • Using high-performance liquid chromatography, researchers found that the typical diagnostic pigment for this species, 19'-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin (hex-fuco), was absent, while an alternative pigment, 19'-butanoyloxyfucoxanthin (but-fuco), was present in all colony samples.
  • The findings suggest that but-fuco serves as a more accurate indicator for bloom monitoring and indicate that these blooms may originate from two different sources, aiding in future efforts to manage these
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