Science Inventory

Effect of nutrient pollution on dinoflagellate cyst assemblages across estuaries of the NW Atlantic

Citation:

Price, A., M. Coffin, V. Prospelova, Jim Latimer, AND G. Chmura. Effect of nutrient pollution on dinoflagellate cyst assemblages across estuaries of the NW Atlantic. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 121(1):339-351, (2017).

Impact/Purpose:

Estuarine and coastal waters are important resources for US and Canadian citizens. This paper summarizes the use of biological indicators that provide information on the eutrophication status and impacts for estuaries along the NW Atlantic coast. These relatively new biological indicators, dinoflagellate cysts, have the potential to provide environmental managers information on recent and historical environmental conditions in estuaries. Together with information on drivers and pressures, dinoflagellate cysts can be used to develop driver-pressure-state-impact models useful to control nutrient pollution from coastal watersheds.

Description:

We analyzed surface sediments from 23 northeast USA estuaries, from Maine to Delaware, and nine estuaries from Prince Edward Island (PEI, Canada), to determine how dinoflagellate cyst assemblages varied with nutrient loading. Overall the abundance of cysts of heterotrophic dinoflagellates correlates with modeled nitrogen loading, but there were also regional signals. On PEI cysts of Gymnodinium microreticulatum characterized estuaries with high nitrogen loading while the sediments of eutrophic Boston Harbor were characterized by high abundances of Spiniferites spp. In Delaware Bay and the Delaware Inland Bays Polysphaeridium zoharyi correlated with higher temperatures and nutrient loading. This is the first study to document the dinoflagellate cyst eutrophication signal at such a large geographic scale in estuaries, thus confirming their value as indicators of water quality change and anthropogenic impact.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:08/15/2017
Record Last Revised:07/26/2017
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 337043