Checklist of potentially toxic phytoplankton species along the Italian coast from 2006 to 2019

Published: 22 December 2023| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/cyc4yhtck6.1
Contributors:
Stefano Accoroni, Monica Cangini, Roberto Angeletti, Carmen Losasso, Simone Bacchiocchi, Antonella Costa, Aurelia Di Taranto, Laura Escalera, Giorgio Fedrizzi, Angela Garzia, Francesca Longo, Andrea Macaluso, Nunzia Melchiorre, Anna Milandri, Stefania Milandri, Marina Montresor, Francesca Neri, Arianna Piersanti, Silva\ Rubini, Chiara Suraci, Francesca Susini, maria Vadrucci, Alessandro Graziano Mudadu, Barbara Vivaldi, Barbara Soro, Cecilia Totti, A Zingone

Description

Seawater samples for phytoplankton analysis were collected in the areas of the aquaculture farms with bottles and/or 20 µm mesh-sized nets following the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission guidelines (Reguera et al., 2016). Samples were preserved by adding acid or neutral Lugol’s solution. Species identification was generally performed in light microscopy, hence it should be considered tentative in all cases requiring electron microscopy or molecular methods. Yet identification at times was supported by more detailed information obtained on specific samples at research institutions of the areas. Toxic or potentially toxic species were counted following the Utermöhl method (EUROPEAN STANDARD, 2006). References EUROPEAN STANDARD (2006). EN 15204 Water quality - Guidance standard on the enumeration of phytoplankton using inverted microscopy (Utermöhl technique). Reguera, B., Alonso, R., Moreira, A., Méndez, S., Dechraoui-Bottein, M.-Y., 2016. Guide for designing and implementing a plan to monitor toxin-producing microalgae. UNESCO & IAEA, Paris, France & Vienna, Austria.

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Phytoplankton, Toxic Algae

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