Sharon McNeill
Scottish Association for Marine Science
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Featured researches published by Sharon McNeill.
Bioresource Technology | 2013
Stephen P. Slocombe; Michael Ross; Naomi J. Thomas; Sharon McNeill; Michele S. Stanley
A convenient small-scale extraction method for lyophilized micro-algae is described that dispenses with labor-intensive homogenization and is widely applicable to algae from different phyla. The procedure employs an optimized sequential extraction in trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and NaOH to achieve chemical lysis. Conditions were tested using several micro-algal strains to develop a method that was generally applicable. Incubation of lyophilized material in 24% (w/v) TCA at 95 °C followed by a hot alkaline treatment was found to be effective for strains that are resistant to conventional extraction approaches, such as the Chlorella and the Eustigmatophycean species. The single-tube extraction procedure can be complete in 4h and is conveniently followed by the Lowry assay, requiring a further 30 min. Overall, this method proved to be generally applicable and ideal either for single samples or for high-throughput screening of multiple algal strains for protein content.
Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2016
Callum Whyte; Keith Davidson; Linda Gilpin; Elaine Mitchell; Grigorios Moschonas; Sharon McNeill; Paul Tett
&NA; Microplankton plays a vital part in marine ecosystems, and its importance has been recognized by the inclusion of microplankton community composition in regulatory frameworks such as the European Water Framework Directive and the Marine Strategy Framework Directive as an indicator of ecological status. Quantitative techniques are therefore required to assess the environmental status of the microplankton in a water body. Here we demonstrate the use of a method known as the microplankton index PI(mp) to evaluate changes in the microplankton community of the west coast Scottish Sea Loch Creran. Microplankton in this fjord has been studied since the 1970s, providing a data set spanning four decades. Our analysis compares an arbitrarily chosen reference period between 1979 and 1981 with a period between 2011 and 2013 and demonstrates that between these two periods community structure has changed considerably with a substantial drop in the numbers of observed diatoms accompanied by a rise in the number of autotrophic/mixotrophic dinoflagellates as well as an increase in the potentially toxin producing genus Pseudo‐nitzschia and that these are related to changes in both the intensity and timing of local patterns of precipitation. The PI(mp) is shown to be a useful and robust method to visualize and quantify changes in the underlying structure of the microplankton community and is a powerful addition to the toolbox of techniques needed to determine the health of our seas.
Harmful Algae | 2017
Ruth F. Paterson; Sharon McNeill; Elaine Mitchell; Thomas P. Adams; Sarah Swan; Dave Clarke; Peter I. Miller; Eileen Bresnan; Keith Davidson
Fjordic coastlines provide an ideal protected environment for both finfish and shellfish aquaculture operations. This study reports the results of a cruise to the Scottish Clyde Sea, and associated fjordic sea lochs, that coincided with blooms of the diarrhetic shellfish toxin producing dinoflagellate Dinophysis acuta and the diatom genus Chaetoceros, that can generate finfish mortalities. Unusually, D. acuta reached one order of magnitude higher cell abundance in the water column (2840cellsL-1) than the more common Dinophysis acuminata (200cellsL-1) and was linked with elevated shellfish toxicity (maximum 601±237μg OA eq/kg shellfish flesh) which caused shellfish harvesting closures in the region. Significant correlations between D. acuta abundance and that of Mesodinium rubrum were also observed across the cruise transect potentially supporting bloom formation of the mixotrophic D. acuta. Significant spatial variability in phytoplankton that was related to physical characteristics of the water column was observed, with a temperature-driven frontal region at the mouth of Loch Fyne being important in the development of the D. acuta, but not the Chaetoceros bloom. The front also provided important protection to the aquaculture located within the loch, with neither of the blooms encroaching within it. Analysis based on a particle-tracking model confirms the importance of the front to cell transport and shows significant inter-annual differences in advection within the region, that are important to the harmful algal bloom risk therein.
Toxins | 2018
Sarah Swan; Andrew D. Turner; Eileen Bresnan; Callum Whyte; Ruth F. Paterson; Sharon McNeill; Elaine Mitchell; Keith Davidson
Diarrhetic shellfish toxins produced by the dinoflagellate genus Dinophysis are a major problem for the shellfish industry worldwide. Separate species of the genus have been associated with the production of different analogues of the okadaic acid group of toxins. To evaluate the spatial and temporal variability of Dinophysis species and toxins in the important shellfish-harvesting region of the Scottish west coast, we analysed data collected from 1996 to 2017 in two contrasting locations: Loch Ewe and the Clyde Sea. Seasonal studies were also undertaken, in Loch Ewe in both 2001 and 2002, and in the Clyde in 2015. Dinophysis acuminata was present throughout the growing season during every year of the study, with blooms typically occurring between May and September at both locations. The appearance of D. acuta was interannually sporadic and, when present, was most abundant in the late summer and autumn. The Clyde field study in 2015 indicated the importance of a temperature front in the formation of a D. acuta bloom. A shift in toxin profiles of common mussels (Mytilus edulis) tested during regulatory monitoring was evident, with a proportional decrease in okadaic acid (OA) and dinophysistoxin-1 (DTX1) and an increase in dinophysistoxin-2 (DTX2) occurring when D. acuta became dominant. Routine enumeration of Dinophysis to species level could provide early warning of potential contamination of shellfish with DTX2 and thus determine the choice of the most suitable kit for effective end-product testing.
Progress in Oceanography | 2013
Jacqueline F. Tweddle; Jonathan Sharples; Matthew R. Palmer; Keith Davidson; Sharon McNeill
Progress in Oceanography | 2013
Keith Davidson; Linda Gilpin; Romain Pete; Debra Brennan; Sharon McNeill; Grigorios Moschonas; Jonathon Sharples
Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers | 2014
Enma Elena García-Martín; Sharon McNeill; Pablo Serret; Raymond J.G. Leakey
Progress in Oceanography | 2017
Enma Elena García-Martín; Chris J. Daniels; Keith Davidson; José Lozano; Kyle M.J. Mayers; Sharon McNeill; Elaine Mitchell; Alex J. Poulton; Duncan A. Purdie; Glen A. Tarran; Callum Whyte; Carol Robinson
Biogeochemistry | 2017
Grigorios Moschonas; Richard J. Gowen; Ruth F. Paterson; Elaine Mitchell; Brian M. Stewart; Sharon McNeill; Patricia M. Glibert; Keith Davidson
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2018
Eric Fouilland; Emilie Le Floc’h; Debra Brennan; Elanor M. Bell; Sian L Lordsmith; Sharon McNeill; Elaine Mitchell; Tim Brand; Enma Elena García-Martín; Raymond J.G. Leakey