Of marine dinoflagellates, many studies have reported on
‘planktonic dinoflagellates’, species that occur in the water
column. On the other hand, until the 1970–1980s, not
many studies had focused on ‘benthic dinoflagellates’,
which live in benthic environments, such as interstitial
spaces of sediments/sands or surfaces of macroalgae, rocks
and coral. Subsequent to the benthic dinoflagellate genus
Gambierdiscus, now known to produce toxins responsible
for ciguatera poisoning, being described in the late 1970s,
taxonomic studies of toxic benthic dinoflagellates have
increased worldwide. In recent decades, a number of spe-
cies have been reported to produce toxins that cause food
poisoning or pose human health hazards.
The second edition of the book ‘Marine benthic dinoflagellates’ has now been published in 2023. The first edition of this
book was published in 2014. It introduced a comprehensive
and systematic summary of the taxonomy and other aspects of
marine benthic dinoflagellates, summarising 45 genera and
189 species of benthic dinoflagellates described as of 2014.
The second edition has updated the status as of 2023, introducing 63 genera and 242 species. This rapid expansion in
the number of genera and species demonstrates how much taxonomic research on benthic dinoflagellates has been conducted around the world in the past 9 years.
The second edition consists of six main chapters.
Chapter I,‘Background’, summarises the history and current status/
problems of the systematics of the benthic dinoflagellates.
Chapter II, ‘Materials & Methods’, describes experimental
aspects of benthic dinoflagellate research, including sampling,
microscopy, culturing and counting methods, molecular detection and quantification methods, and toxicity/toxin analyses.
Chapter III, ‘Taxonomy’, comprising the main section of the
book, provides a detailed taxonomic summary of the currently
described species with beautiful optical/electron micrographs
and illustrations along with references. In addition, as discussed
in this second edition, because many cryptic species that cannot
be distinguished by morphological characteristics alone have
been reported in recent years, nucleotide sequence data, such
as ribosomal DNA regions, have become essential for molecular
identification of these species. Accordingly, in the second edition, accession numbers for nucleotide sequences related to the
type materials of each species have been newly added when
available and useful.
Chapter IV, ‘Phylogeny and systematics’,
contains a discussion of the phylogenetic position of each genus
based on morphological characteristics and molecular phyloge-
netic information.
Chapter V, ‘Toxins of benthic dinoflagellates
and benthic harmful algal blooms’, provides currently available
information on the toxin production and toxicity of each species
and those references with tables.
Chapter VI, ‘Relevance for science and society’, summarises the status of benthic dinoflagellate research in two sections: basic research and health, social and economic research. The former section reports the evolution
of dinoflagellates/chloroplasts/toxicity and related genes, as well
as their use in nutritional supplements and natural products,
whereas the latter section reports the impacts of the toxins and
related food poisoning on human health and socioeconomic
activity. Because an accurate classification and identification of
each species and the development of monitoring methods based
on the detailed taxonomy are necessary to accurately assess the
scientific and social impacts caused by benthic dinoflagellates,
it is expected that taxonomic studies on these microalgae will be
actively continued.
I believe that this book will contribute greatly to improving
observation skills especially for young researchers studying
benthic dinoflagellates. I am one of those who have greatly
benefited from the first edition. I read it very carefully and
attempted to memorise the morphology of each taxon. As a
result, my resolution of species identification has improved
dramatically, and this has greatly helped me to identify spe-
cies in field samples by microscopy.
Therefore, I recommend this book to all those who are
beginning their research on benthic dinoflagellates, to those
who have studied these microalgae and to many others
involved in marine ecological research. Finally, I am grateful
to Dr Mona Hoppenrath and the other authors of this book for
the opportunity to write this book review.
Tomohiro Nishimura
Fisheries Technology Institute, Japan Fisheries Research and
Education Agency, Hatsukaichi, Hiroshima, Japan