Feeding deterrent and toxicity effects of apo-fucoxanthinoids and phycotoxins on a marine copepod (Tigriopus californicus)
Tóm tắt
Using the marine harpacticoid copepod Tigriopus californicus, the effects of phytoplankton feeding deterrents and toxins were differentiated and measured. Eight compounds were tested for feeding deterrence and toxicity responses: four apo-fucoxanthinoids (apo-10′-fucoxanthinal, apo-12′-fucoxanthinal, apo-12-fucoxanthinal, and apo-13′-fucoxanthinone) and four well-known phycotoxins (domoic acid, okadaic acid, microcystin-LR, and a mixture of PSP-1 toxins). Since several of these compounds exhibited both feeding deterrence and toxicity, a model was developed to deconvolute the observed toxicity response from the observed feeding deterrence response, and to classify these compounds based on the degree of toxicity and/or feeding deterrence they exhibited towards T. californicus. Microcystin-LR, the PSP-1 toxins, and the four apo-fucoxanthinoids behaved only as feeding deterrents at low concentrations. Okadaic acid exhibited both toxicity and feeding deterrence at low concentrations, with the threshold concentration for feeding deterrence at a lower level than the threshold concentration for toxicity. Domoic acid acted only as a toxin at low concentrations, with all decreases in feeding resulting from the death of the copepod.