Yuzao Qi
Jinan University
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Featured researches published by Yuzao Qi.
Harmful Algae | 2003
DanLing Tang; Dana R. Kester; I-Hsun Ni; Yuzao Qi; Hiroshi Kawamura
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) have posed a serious threat to the aquaculture and fisheries industries in recent years, especially in Asia. During 1998 there were several particularly serious blooms in the coastal waters of south China, which caused a serious damage to aquaculture. We report a massive dinoflagellate bloom near the mouth of Pearl River in November 1998 with analyses of data from both in situ sea water measurements and satellites. A multi-parameter environmental mapping system was used to obtain real-time measurements of water quality properties and wind data through the algal bloom area, which allow us to compare water measurements from inside and outside of the bloom areas. This bloom with high concentrations of algal cells was evident as a series of red colored parallel bands of surface water that were 100–300 m long and 10–30 m wide with a total area of about 20–30 km 2 by visual. The algal density reached 3.8×10 7 cells l −1 and the surface chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentration was high. The algal species has been identified as Gymnodiniumcf. catenatumGraham. The water column in the bloom area was stratified, where the surface temperature was 24–25 ◦ C, the salinity was 18–20%, and the northern wind was about 3–4 m s −1 in the bloom area. The SeaWiFS image has shown high Chl-a area coinciding with the bloom area. The sea surface temperature (SST) image of the Pearl River estuary combined with the in situ measurements indicated that the bloom occurred along a mixing front between cooler lower salinity river water and warmer higher saline South China Sea (SCS) water.
Hydrobiologia | 2004
Yuzao Qi; Jufang Chen; Zhaohui Wang; Ning Xu; Yan Wang; Pingping Shen; Songhui Lu; I. J. Hodgkiss
The year 1998 was an unusual year for Guangdong Province and Hong Kong, both in southern China, as the frequency and intensity of harmful algal blooms (HAB) were much higher than usual. This paper describes the causative organisms found associated with these blooms and speculates on the possible causes of these blooms, including the effects of increased temperature, reduced salinity, eutrophication and meteorological and oceanographic events on the initiation and spread of these blooms.
Phycological Research | 2004
Zhaohui Wang; Kazumi Matsuoka; Yuzao Qi; Jufang Chen; Songhui Lu
Nine sediment cores of 8–26 cm in length were collected from two basins of Daya Bay, the South China Sea, by Tokyo University Fisheries Oceanography Laboratory core sampler in August 2001 to investigate the distribution of dinoflagellate resting cysts. In the present study, 51 different cyst morphotypes representing 22 genera were identified from 65 sediment samples. Among them, there were 21 autotrophic species and 30 heterotrophic ones. Cyst species richness in each sample varied from 12 to 29, while the values of Shannon‐Weaver diversity index (H′) were between 0.15 and 4.13. There were an obvious increase in both species richness and values of H′in 2–6 cm sediments. Cyst concentrations varied from 154 to 113 483 cysts per gram dry weight sediment, and were much higher in upper sediments. Scrippsiella trochoidea was the most dominant cyst type, which took up over 90% of cyst assemblages in the upper sediments. The abrupt increase of S. trochoidea cysts in the surface sediments reflected the bloom of this species in Daya Bay in 2000. The results from cyst assemblages showed some trend of changes in water quality in this area, and indicated a typical type of pollution caused by cultural eutrophication, which started in the 1980s and greatly accelerated in the middle of 1990s. Cysts of Alexandrium, mainly those of Alexandrium catenella and Alexandrium tamarense complex, occurred frequently and abundantly in this area, with the highest concentration and relative frequency of 503 cysts per gram dry weight sediment and 22.3%, respectively. The high abundance of Alexandrium cysts provided rich ‘seed bed’ for Alexandrium blooms and was also an important source of paralytic shellfish poisoning toxins, especially in winter.
Phycological Research | 2004
Zhaohui Wang; Yuzao Qi; Songhui Lu; Yan Wang; Kazumi Matsuoka
In order to understand the distribution of dinoflagellate cysts, surface sediments were collected from 15 stations in Changjiang River Estuary from 122°E to 123.5°E and from 29°N to 32°N in four cruises from May 2002 to February 2003. In the present study, 38 different cyst morphotypes representing 21 genera and 6 groups were identified, while 1 type was not identified into genus level. Species number and cell density of dinoflagellate cysts ranged from 10 to 25 species and from 12 to 587 per gram of dry weight, respectively. There were no obvious differences in cyst composition and density among seasons. However, the highest cyst species number and density were recorded in summer and winter, respectively. Cysts of heterotrophic dinoflagellates, which held 55.7% of the overall cyst density averagely, dominated cyst assemblages. Cyst density and species number increased from the west to the east, from the north to the south within the study area. Cysts of toxic dinoflagellates Alexandrium cat‐enella and Alexandrium tamarense complex distributed widely and were observed in almost all stations, with the maximum cell density of 81 per gram of dry weight.
Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology | 2014
Tao Jiang; Yixiao Xu; Yang Li; Yuzao Qi; Tianjiu Jiang; Feng Wu; Fan Zhang
A 12-month program of monitoring potentially toxic microalgae (that produce lipophilic shellfish toxins; LSTs) and their toxins in bivalves was conducted from April 2006 to March 2007 in the Nanji Islands, East China Sea. Two Dinophysis species, D. caudata and D. acuminata, were identified, and D. caudata was found to be the dominant species. D. caudata was detected in water samples between April and June 2006, and between February and March 2007. It reached its highest abundances in May, with a mean abundance of 1.38×102 cells/L in surface water and 1.25×102 cells/L in bottom water (<10 m deep). The temporal distribution of D. caudata was associated with the occurrence of LSTs in bivalve samples, which mostly occurred at the same time as D. caudata blooms, between April and July 2006. All of the cultured bivalves sampled between April and June were contaminated with LSTs, with an average toxicity of 85 μg okadaic acid (OA) eq./100 g meat, which was four times higher than the Chinese regulatory limit (20 μg OA eq./100 g meat). Ten out of fifteen wild samples (66.7%) collected during the same period were positive for LSTs, and contained an average LST toxicity of 45 μg OA eq./100 g meat (more than twice the regulatory value). Cultured Patinopecten yessoensis collected on 15 May 2006 had the highest toxicity, 320 μg OA eq./100 g meat, and relatively high toxicities (80 to 160 μg OA eq./100 g meat) were found in bivalves until the end of July.
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2013
Karin A F Zonneveld; Fabienne Marret; Gerard J M Versteegh; Kara Bogus; Sophie Bonnet; Ilham Bouimetarhan; Erica M. Crouch; Anne de Vernal; Rehab Elshanawany; Lucy E. Edwards; Oliver Esper; Sven Forke; Kari Grøsfjeld; Maryse Henry; Ulrike Holzwarth; Jean-François Kielt; So-Young Kim; Stéphanie Ladouceur; David Ledu; Liang Chen; Audrey Limoges; Laurent Londeix; S.-H. Lu; Magdy S. Mahmoud; Gianluca Marino; Kazumi Matsouka; Jens Matthiessen; D.C. Mildenhal; Peta J. Mudie; Helen Neil
Marine Ecology | 2004
Zhaohui Wang; Kazumi Matsuoka; Yuzao Qi; Jufang Chen
Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology | 2010
Mengmeng Tong; Qixing Zhou; Kulis M. David; Tianjiu Jiang; Yuzao Qi; Anderson M. Donald
Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2009
Wei-Dong Yang; Jie-Sheng Liu; Hong-Ye Li; Xin-Lian Zhang; Yuzao Qi
Harmful Algae | 2012
Ping-Ping Shen; Ya-Nan Li; Yuzao Qi; Lvping Zhang; Yehui Tan; Liangmin Huang