The aim of the present study was to clarify the bloom dynamics and community composition of hepatotoxin microcystin-producing and non-microcystin-producing Microcystis genotypes in the environment. In Lake Mikata (Fukui, Japan) from April 2003 to January 2004, seasonal variation in the number of cells with microcystin (mcy) genotypes and the genetic diversity of the total population were investigated using quantitative competitive PCR and a 16S rDNA clone library, respectively. Using competitive PCR, cells with mcyA genotypes were quantified in August and October, and the ratio of the number of these mcyA genotypes to colony-forming Microcystis cells was 0.37 and 2.37, respectively. The 16S rDNA clones obtained could be divided into 12 ribotypes: a-l. Sixty-one Microcystis strains isolated from Lake Mikata during the sampling period were subjected to toxicity tests using HPLC and ELISA, PCR-based detection of the mcyA gene, and sequence analysis of the 16S rDNA. All isolates could be differentiated into 11 ribotypes (a, b, d, f, h, i, and m-q). Ribotypes b, f, i, m, n, and p had at least one strain that was a microcystin producer. In natural communities ribotypes b and f accounted for 85% of the 16S rDNA clones in August, and ribotypes b and i accounted for 24% of the clones in October. Thus, in some bloom stages the presence of microcystin genotypes identified using the 16S rDNA clone library correlated with that of mcy genotypes determined using competitive PCR.
High speed photodiodes with semitransparent film-semiconductor junctions, which behave as Schottky barriers, are designed and prepared. The optimized width of the depletion layer of the photodiode is calculated for the selected cut-off frequency. The relations between transmittance and sheet resistivity are studied with some films of semiconducting compounds, which affect the gain and response time of photodiodes.
The photodiodes, fabricated by the deposition of the semitransparent films of CdS or CU2Se on Si, have high frequency response and the cut-off frequency of Cu2Se-n.Si photodiodes is higher than 4 GHz.
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