Acta Botanica Croatica, Vol. 68 No. 2, 2009.
Original scientific paper
The diatom Chaetoceros in ships’ ballast waters – survivorship of stowaways
Georgia Klein
; Department of Biology, Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB, E4L 1G7, Canada
Irena Kaczmarska
; Department of Biology, Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB, E4L 1G7, Canada
James M. Ehrman
; Digital Microscopy Facility, Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB, E4L 1G7, Canada
Abstract
Ship ballast water discharged by vessels into the receiving port is recognised today as an important vector for the spread of non-indigenous species and facilitates the introduction of potential invasive species. Here, we report on 18 species (of about 30 identified), both vegetative cells and spores, of the diatom genus Chaetoceros Ehrenberg found in ballast water collected from ships arriving at Canadian ports on theWest Coast (WC), East Coast (EC) and the Great Lakes (GL). We found live, vegetative Chaetoceros cells (one of the most abundant taxa) in 49% of the 57 ballast water samples. The highest density of viable spores enumerated in our counts was 414 cells L–1. In 62% of 52 samples examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Chaetoceros spores were found, though fewer live, identifiable spores were found using light microscopy. Three reportedly harmful species, C. convolutus, C. danicus, C. debilis were encountered in WC samples, and additionally, C. cf. hispidus, a species not yet reported from Canada. C. ceratosporus and C. cf. subsecundus, to date reported only from the EC of the USA, now have been transported to the port of Vancouver, British Columbia. Our findings contribute to the assessment of the effectiveness of ballast water treatment via water exchange, and serve to evaluate the diversity of diatom vegetative cells and spores transported in ballast water tanks.
Keywords
Diatom; Chaetoceros; phytoplankton; non-indigenous species; ballast water; resting stage; spore; ultrastructure
Hrčak ID:
41433
URI
Publication date:
15.10.2009.
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