Authors
Per R Jonsson, Henrik Pavia, Gunilla Toth
Publication date
2009/7/7
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
106
Issue
27
Pages
11177-11182
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Many planktonic microalgae produce a range of toxins and may form harmful algal blooms. One hypothesis is that some toxins are allelopathic, suppressing the growth of competitors, and it has been suggested that allelopathy may be one important mechanism causing algal blooms. In a metaanalysis of recent experimental work, we looked for evidence that allelopathy may explain the initiation of algal blooms. With few exceptions, allelopathic effects were only significant at very high cell densities typical of blooms. We conclude that there is no experimental support for allelopathy at prebloom densities, throwing doubts on allelopathy as a mechanism in bloom formation. Most studies tested allelopathy using cell-free manipulations. With simple models we show that cell-free manipulations may underestimate allelopathy at low cell densities if effects are transmitted during cell–cell interactions. However, we suggest …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PR Jonsson, H Pavia, G Toth - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009