Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Luiz Laureno Mafra is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Luiz Laureno Mafra.


Marine Drugs | 2015

Persistent Contamination of Octopuses and Mussels with Lipophilic Shellfish Toxins during Spring Dinophysis Blooms in a Subtropical Estuary.

Luiz Laureno Mafra; Daiana Lopes; Vanessa C. Bonilauri; Hajime Uchida; Toshiyuki Suzuki

This study investigates the occurrence of diarrhetic shellfish toxins (DSTs) and their producing phytoplankton species in southern Brazil, as well as the potential for toxin accumulation in co-occurring mussels (Perna perna) and octopuses (Octopus vulgaris). During the spring in 2012 and 2013, cells of Dinophysis acuminata complex were always present, sometimes at relatively high abundances (max. 1143 cells L−1), likely the main source of okadaic acid (OA) in the plankton (max. 34 ng L−1). Dinophysis caudata occurred at lower cell densities in 2013 when the lipophilic toxins pectenotoxin-2 (PTX-2) and PTX-2 seco acid were detected in plankton and mussel samples. Here, we report for the first time the accumulation of DSTs in octopuses, probably linked to the consumption of contaminated bivalves. Perna perna mussels were consistently contaminated with different DSTs (max. 42 µg kg−1), and all octopuses analyzed (n = 5) accumulated OA in different organs/tissues: digestive glands (DGs) > arms > gills > kidneys > stomach + intestine. Additionally, similar concentrations of 7-O-palmytoyl OA and 7-O-palmytoly dinophysistoxin-1 (DTX-1) were frequently detected in the hepatopancreas of P. perna and DGs of O. vulgaris. Therefore, octopuses can be considered a potential vector of DSTs to both humans and top predators such as marine mammals.


Marine Drugs | 2017

Growth, Toxin Production and Allelopathic Effects of Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries under Iron-Enriched Conditions

Bruna Fernanda Sobrinho; Luana Mocelin de Camargo; Leonardo Sandrini-Neto; Cristian Rafael Kleemann; Eunice da Costa Machado; Luiz Laureno Mafra

In order to assess the effects of Fe-enrichment on the growth and domoic acid (DA) production of the toxigenic diatom Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries, static cultures that received the addition of different iron (Fe) concentrations were maintained for 30 days. Intra- and extracellular DA concentrations were evaluated over time, and growth and chain-formation were compared to those of non-toxic diatoms, Bacillaria sp. Growth rates of P. multiseries (μ = 0.45–0.73 d−1) were similar among cultures containing different Fe concentrations. Likewise, the similar incidence and length of P. multiseries stepped cell chains (usually 2–4; up to 8-cell long) among the treatments reinforces that the cultures were not growth-inhibited under any condition tested, suggesting an efficient Fe acquisition mechanism. Moreover, DA concentrations were significantly higher under the highest Fe concentration, indicating that Fe is required for toxin synthesis. Bacillaria sp. reached comparable growth rates under the same Fe concentrations, except when the dissolved cell contents from a P. multiseries culture was added. The 50–70% reduction in cell density and 70–90% decrease in total chlorophyll-a content of Bacillaria sp. at early stationary growth phase indicates, for the first time, an allelopathic effect of undetermined compounds released by Pseudo-nitzschia to another diatom species.


Toxins | 2018

Diel Variations in Cell Abundance and Trophic Transfer of Diarrheic Toxins during a Massive Dinophysis Bloom in Southern Brazil

Thiago Alves; Luiz Laureno Mafra

Dinophysis spp. are a major source of diarrheic toxins to marine food webs, especially during blooms. This study documented the occurrence, in late May 2016, of a massive toxic bloom of the Dinophysis acuminata complex along the southern coast of Brazil, associated with an episode of marked salinity stratification. The study tracked the daily vertical distribution of Dinophysis spp. cells and their ciliate prey, Mesodinium cf. rubrum, and quantified the amount of lipophilic toxins present in seston and accumulated by various marine organisms in the food web. The abundance of the D. acuminata complex reached 43 × 104 cells·L−1 at 1.0 m depth at the peak of the bloom. Maximum cell densities of cryptophyceans and M. cf. rubrum (>500 × 104 and 18 × 104 cell·L−1, respectively) were recorded on the first day of sampling, one week before the peak in abundance of the D. acuminata complex. The diarrheic toxin okadaic acid (OA) was the only toxin detected during the bloom, attaining unprecedented, high concentrations of up to 829 µg·L−1 in seston, and 143 ± 93 pg·cell−1 in individually picked cells of the D. acuminata complex. Suspension-feeders such as the mussel, Perna perna, and barnacle, Megabalanus tintinnabulum, accumulated maximum OA levels (up to 578.4 and 21.9 µg total OA·Kg−1, respectively) during early bloom stages, whereas predators and detritivores such as Caprellidae amphipods (154.6 µg·Kg−1), Stramonita haemastoma gastropods (111.6 µg·Kg−1), Pilumnus spinosissimus crabs (33.4 µg·Kg−1) and a commercially important species of shrimp, Xiphopenaeus kroyeri (7.2 µg·Kg−1), only incorporated OA from mid- to late bloom stages. Conjugated forms of OA were dominant (>70%) in most organisms, except in blenny fish, Hypleurochilus fissicornis, and polychaetes, Pseudonereis palpata (up to 59.3 and 164.6 µg total OA·Kg−1, respectively), which contained mostly free-OA throughout the bloom. Although algal toxins are only regulated in bivalves during toxic blooms in most countries, including Brazil, this study indicates that human seafood consumers might be exposed to moderate toxin levels from a variety of other vectors during intense toxic outbreaks.


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2014

Diversity and toxicity of the diatom Pseudo-nitzschia Peragallo in the Gulf of Maine, Northwestern Atlantic Ocean

Luciano F. Fernandes; Katherine A. Hubbard; Mindy L. Richlen; Juliette L. Smith; Stephen S. Bates; James M. Ehrman; Claude Léger; Luiz Laureno Mafra; David M. Kulis; Michael A. Quilliam; Katie Libera; Linda A. R. McCauley; Donald M. Anderson


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2014

Diarrheic toxins in field-sampled and cultivated Dinophysis spp. cells from southern Brazil

Luiz Laureno Mafra; Camila Prestes dos Santos Tavares; Mathias Alberto Schramm


Fisheries Science | 2015

Differential okadaic acid accumulation and detoxification by oysters and mussels during natural and simulated Dinophysis blooms

Luiz Laureno Mafra; Tatiany Ribas; Thiago Alves; Luís Antônio de Oliveira Proença; Mathias Alberto Schramm; Hajime Uchida; Toshiyuki Suzuki


Scientia Marina | 2016

Primary productivity and phytoplankton dynamics in a subtropical estuary: a multiple timescale approach

Rafael Antonio Parizzi; Eunice da Costa Machado; Camila Prestes dos Santos Tavares; Luciano F. Fernandes; Maurício G. Camargo; Luiz Laureno Mafra


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2018

Interannual variability in Dinophysis spp. abundance and toxin accumulation in farmed mussels (Perna perna) in a subtropical estuary

Thiago Alves; M. A. Schramm; L. A. O. Proença; T. O. Pinto; Luiz Laureno Mafra


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2017

Growth, chain formation, and toxin production by southern Brazilian Pseudo-nitzschia isolates under laboratory conditions

Pedro Rebelo Wadt; Luiz Laureno Mafra; Camila Prestes dos Santos Tavares; Luciano F. Fernandes; Luís Antônio de Oliveira Proença


Hydrobiologia | 2016

Bioturbation by the sand dollar Encope emarginata (Echinoidea, Mellitidae) changes the composition and size structure of microphytobenthic assemblages

Marco C. Brustolin; Micheli Cristina Thomas; Luiz Laureno Mafra

Collaboration


Dive into the Luiz Laureno Mafra's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luciano F. Fernandes

Federal University of Paraná

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thiago Alves

Federal University of Paraná

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hajime Uchida

Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marco C. Brustolin

Federal University of Paraná

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maurício G. Camargo

Federal University of Paraná

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Micheli Cristina Thomas

Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge