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result(s) for
"Peltekis, Alexandra"
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Remotely Sensing Phytoplankton Size Structure in the Mediterranean Sea: Insights from In Situ Data and Temperature-Corrected Abundance-Based Models
2025
Since the mid-1980s, the Mediterranean Sea’s surface and deeper layers have warmed at unprecedented rates, with recent projections identifying it as one of the regions most impacted by rising global temperatures. Metrics that characterize phytoplankton abundance, phenology and size structure are widely utilized as ecological indicators that enable a quantitative assessment of the status of marine ecosystems in response to environmental change. Here, using an extensive, updated in situ pigment dataset collated from numerous past research campaigns across the Mediterranean Sea, we re-parameterized an abundance-based phytoplankton size class model that infers Chl-a concentration in three phytoplankton size classes: pico- (<2 μm), nano- (2–20 μm) and micro-phytoplankton (>20 μm). Following recent advancements made within this category of size class models, we also incorporated information of sea surface temperature (SST) into the model parameterization. By tying model parameters to SST, the performance of the re-parameterized model was improved based on comparisons with concurrent, independent in situ measurements. Similarly, the application of the model to remotely sensed ocean color observations revealed strong agreement between satellite-derived estimates of phytoplankton size structure and in situ observations, with a performance comparable to the current regional operational datasets on size structure. The proposed conceptual regional model, parameterized with the most extended in situ pigment dataset available to date for the area, serves as a suitable foundation for long-term (1997–present) analyses on phytoplankton size structure and ecological indicators (i.e., phenology), ultimately linking higher trophic level responses to a changing Mediterranean Sea.
Journal Article
Assessment of the allelochemical activity of Ostreopsis cf. ovata and the ovatoxins towards competitive benthic microalgae
2022
Recurrent blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata are frequently reported in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea. The impact of these proliferations on other microalgal species inhabiting the same habitats is of interest from an ecological prospective. In vitro experiments were carried out to investigate the influence of O. cf. ovata on the growth of the co-occurring benthic diatoms Licmophora paradoxa, Navicula arenaria and the benthic dinoflagellates Prorocentrum lima and Coolia monotis. Overall, O. cf. ovata exhibited weak allelopathic effects towards these microalgal species, with a reduction in the cell abundance for L. paradoxa and P. lima only. Interestingly, dead cells of L. paradoxa and N. arenaria were observed embedded in the thick mucus surrounding O. cf. ovata cells, suggesting that the mucous layer could act as a toxic phycosphere, especially for non-motile cells. All competitors were further exposed for 24 h to ovatoxins, the major toxins produced by O. cf. ovata, and the maximum quantum yield efficiency of L. paradoxa, N. arenaria and P. lima was affected at a minimum concentration of 10 µg mL−1. We then hypothesized that the diffusion of solubilized ovatoxins in the culture medium affects only moderately the competitors’ growth, whereas their accumulation in the mucus would yield deleterious effects. More precisely, the competitors’ sensitivity to ovatoxins was enhanced in their stationary phase of growth and resulted from a rapid inhibition of an uncharacterized photosynthetic step downstream photosystem II. Altogether, these results emphasize the predominant role of the O. cf. ovata’s mucus in driving ecological interactions and suggest that it can affect the growth of several benthic microalgae by accumulating the potent ovatoxins.
Journal Article