Title of article :
Delayed luminescence of Prorocentrum minimum under controlled conditions
Author/Authors :
Marina Monti، نويسنده , , Alexis Zrimec، نويسنده , , Alfred Beran، نويسنده , , Maja Berden Zrimec، نويسنده , , Luka Drinovec، نويسنده , , Gorazd Kosi ، نويسنده , , Francesco Tamberlich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Delayed luminescence (DL), also termed delayed fluorescence or delayed light emission, is the phenomenon of long-lived light emission by plants and cyanobacteria after being illuminated with light and put into darkness. Culture growth of three Prorocentrum minimum strains was studied with DL measurements. DL decay kinetics was measured from 1–60 s after a pulse of white light. The strains used were from the Adriatic Sea (PmK), from Chesapeake Bay, USA (D5), and from the Baltic Sea (BAL), cultured at salinity of 32, 16, and 8 (practical salinity scale), respectively. The strains differed in cell size and chlorophyll a content (PmK > D5 > BAL), as well as in DL parameters. The DL results were compared to standard measurements of culture density and carbon content (calculated from biovolumes). DL decay curves had a specific peak, which changed with culture growth and showed more similarities between the strains PmK and D5. The DL intensity increased with cell density and carbon content in a two-stage process, corresponding to the lag and exponential phases of growth. DL intensity was best correlated with carbon content irrespective of strain and is proposed as an estimate of biomass and for differentiating between lag and exponential phases of growth.
Keywords :
Prorocentrum minimum , Growth phases , delayed luminescence
Journal title :
Harmful Algae
Journal title :
Harmful Algae