Peter Leavitt
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10294/15874
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Browsing Peter Leavitt by Subject "cyanotoxin"
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Item Open Access Sedimentary DNA and pigments show increasing abundance and toxicity of cyanoHABs during the Anthropocene(Wiley, 2023-02-17) Heathcote, Adam J.; Taranu, Zofia E.; Tromas, Nicolas; MacIntyre-Newell, Meaghan; Leavitt, Peter R.; Pick, Frances R.1. Cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cyanoHABs) are assumed to be increasing in abundance and toxicity, but comprehensive analysis of change through time is limited, in part, because some key taxa (e.g., Microcystis) leave ambiguous evi- dence of historical abundance and toxicity. Sedimentary DNA (sedDNA) can allow the reconstruction of the cyanobacteria community as well as the frequency of genes specific to cyanotoxin production, enabling us to determine which taxa are present and their potential for toxin-production. 2. Using a combination of droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) and high-throughput sequencing (HTS), we quantified the abundance of cyanobacte- rial genes of known function and changes in cyanobacteria taxa from sedDNA over the last century in nine lakes along a gradient of lake size, depth and trophic state in Minnesota, U.S.A. Using ddPCR, we quantified genes associated with mi- crocystin toxin-producing potential (mcyE), total cyanobacteria (CYA, 16S rRNA) and the genus Microcystis (MICR, 16S rRNA). Using HTS on a subset of lakes, we investigated how the abundance of this toxin-producing gene covaried with the cyanobacteria community composition. We also compared ddPCR and HTS data to fossil pigments, a well-established palaeolimnological method used to track changes in primary producers over time. 3. Our results showed a significant correlation between MICR and the quantity of mcyE gene and cyanobacterial taxa with known toxin- production potential. The abundance of both genes likewise increased concomitantly through time. 4. Community analyses of HTS data showed significant change in cyanobacte- rial communities commencing c. 1950 when major land-use change in this re- gion led to increased lake productivity, and c. 1990 when Dolichospermum and Microcystis genera increased in abundance, and the subtropical exotic cyanobac- teria Raphidiopsis raciborskii and Sphaerospermopsis aphanizomenoides became abundant. Cyanobacteria pigment data reflected these changes only in deeper lakes, suggesting issues related to benthic production or biomarker preservation in shallower systems.