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Articles

Distribution of three alien cyanobacterial species (Nostocales) in northeast Germany: Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii, Anabaena bergii and Aphanizomenon aphanizomenoides

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Pages 696-703 | Received 18 Oct 2005, Accepted 29 May 2006, Published online: 22 Apr 2019
 

Abstract

A. Stüken, J. Rücker, T. Endrulat, K. Preussel, M. Hemm, B. Nixdorf, U. Karsten and C. Wiedner. 2006. Distribution of three alien cyanobacterial species (Nostocales) in northeast Germany: Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii, Anabaena bergii and Aphanizomenon aphanizomenoides. Phycologia 45: 696–703. DOI: 10.2216/05-58.1

Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii is considered a cyanobacterium of tropical origin and an alien species to temperate waters. However, it has been detected as far north as northern Germany. While previous studies have shown that all isolated German C. raciborskii strains are hepatotoxic, little is known about the spatial occurrence and relative frequency of this species in temperate Germany. The aim of this study was to investigate the spatial distribution and relative frequency of C. raciborskii close to its northernmost distribution limit, to characterise the habitat in which it is most likely to occur in this climatic zone and to search for any other neocyanobacterial species that might be present in German waters but has so far been overlooked. One hundred forty-two water bodies in northeast Germany were sampled from June until September 2004. All cyanobacteria species were analysed qualitatively and semiquantitatively. Besides C. raciborskii, two additional neocyano-bacterial species were detected: Anabaena bergii and Aphanizomenon aphanizomenoides. For both taxa, these findings represent their northernmost occurrence and their first report from German waters. Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii was present in 27%, Anabaena bergii in 9% and Aphanizomenon aphanizomenoides in 7% of the samples. The occurrence of each species was analysed in relation to maximum lake depth, Secchi depth, lake volume and lake surface area. All three species were present in a wide range of habitats, but C. raciborskii and Anabaena bergii occurred significantly more often in shallow, turbid waters than in deep, transparent water bodies. None of the parameters investigated were significantly correlated with the occurrence of Aphanizomenon aphanizomenoides. In conclusion, alien thermophilic cyanobacterial species are much more widely distributed in temperate Germany than previously known. The results are discussed with respect to the possible mechanisms that enable these organisms to expand northwards.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Henning Baudler, Jutta Fastner, Ingo Henschke, Antje Köhler, Jan Köhler, Susan Mbedi, Michael Sachtleben, Rhena Schuhmann, Katja Schöne, Wolfgang Terlinden & Jana Woelfel for their substantial help with the sampling, and Helgard Täuscher & Ute Mischke for the provision of unpublished C. raciborskii data. Further, we thank Jiri Komárek and Larelle Fabbro for helpful comments on the identification of Anabaena bergii. The study was funded by the KompetenzZentrum Wasser Berlin gGmbH.

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