In this issue

Five Decades Behind the Limelight: Crown-Of-Thorns Sea Star Outbreaks Razing the Already Ailing Philippine Reefs
Sensory Characteristics and Storage Analysis of Newly Developed Spider Conch Balls from the Spider Conch (Lambis lambis)
First Report of Ichthyofaunal Composition in the River of Maduao, Maco, Davao de Oro, Philippines
Morphological and Genetic Diversity Assessment of Freshwater Prawns (Macrobrachium spp.) in the Cairawan River, Antique Province, Panay Island, Philippines
Synthesis and Characterization of Phytoandrogen from Different Species of Pine Trees and its Potential Use for Aquaculture
Status of the Salt Industry in the Philippines: Production, Challenges, and Opportunities
Assessment of the Acetes Beach Seine Fishery in Miagao, Iloilo, Philippines
Assessment of Socio-demographic Predictors of Fish Farmers’ Access to Formal Credit Sources in Ogun West Senatorial District, Nigeria
Metamorphic Success and Production cost of Holothuria scabra Reared on Microalgae Concentrates Compared with Live Microalgae
Efficacy of Seaweed Liquid Extract from Ulva spp. in Improving Growth and Chlorophyll-a Content of Eucheuma denticulatum in Tissue Culture
Optimized Nutritional Intakes of Fishers’ Children in Coastal Communities in Mabini, Davao de Oro, Philippines
Initial Assessment of the Benthic Profile and Reef Fish Composition of the Damilisan Marine Sanctuary, Miagao, Iloilo, Philippines
Morphology, Phylogeny and Discovery of the Antioxidant Potential of a Marine Dinoflagellate Karlodinium ballantinum (Kareniaceae, Dinophyceae) Isolated from Subic Bay, Zambales, Central Luzon, Philippines
Proximate Composition and Physico-chemical Properties of Dried Pyropia acanthophora in Sta. Praxedes, Cagayan, Philippines

Journal Issue Volume 31 Issue 1 Morphology, Phylogeny and Discovery of the Antioxidant Potential of...

Research Article

Morphology, Phylogeny and Discovery of the Antioxidant Potential of a Marine Dinoflagellate Karlodinium ballantinum (Kareniaceae, Dinophyceae) Isolated from Subic Bay, Zambales, Central Luzon, Philippines

Julienne Alrisse V. Flores1 ORCID logo, Samantha Patricia Esteban1, Jerwin R. Undan1 ORCID logo, Koyo Kuwata2 ORCID logo, Mitsunori Iwataki2 ORCID logo

1 Central Luzon State University, Science City of Munoz, Nueva Ecija 3120 Philippines
2 Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan

Page 166-176 | Received 01 Dec 2023, Accepted 13 May 2024

Abstract

Morphological characteristics, phylogenetic analysis, and antioxidant activity of a marine unarmored dinoflagellate Karlodinium ballantinum were examined using a culture established from Subic Bay, Zambales in November 2022. Detailed examinations were based on light microscopy and molecular phylogeny inferred from internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and LSU rDNA sequences. Cells of K. ballantinum were small and ellipsoid, possessing a straight ASC, large central nucleus, accumulation bodies, and unequally distributed chloroplasts with internal pyrenoids. Cell size ranged from 7.2–13.7 μm in length and 5.4–9.0 μm in width. Phylogenetic analyses suggested that K. ballantinum has a close affinity to K. gentienii and K. zhouanum. Upscaling the culture into 20 L, the final cell density of the culture reached approximately 177.5×106 cells/mL, which produced 0.1 g of algal biomass. The antioxidant activity of K. ballantinum, as screened using the DPPH assay, showed a 23.39% antioxidative property. This result displayed the potential of K. ballantinum to be beneficial microalgae despite being known as a causative agent of HABs. The present study is the first record of K. ballantinum in Subic Bay, Zambales, and serves as the first report of the antioxidant activity of a species under the genus Karlodinium.


Keywords: fisheries, red tide, taxonomy, harmful algal blooms, antioxidant activity, kareniacean dinoflagellate