Chlorophyll and carotenoid transformation and destruction by Calanus spp. grazing on diatoms

  • Head E
  • Harris L
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Abstract

Copepods and seawater were collected during spring bloom conditions off southwest Nova Scotia and the east coast of Newfoundland, Canada. The copepods were staved for 12 or 24 h and then fed with screened seawater. High pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) was used to measure the concentrations of chlorophyll a and c (and derived phaeopigments), fucoxanthin and diadinoxanthin in the incubation medium both before and after grazing, and in purified samplses of faecal pellets collected after grazing . Close to 100% of ingested chlorophylls a and c did not survive digestion by copepods. Virtually no phaeophorbide a of phaeophytin a were produced but instead one or both of their pyrolised derivatives. A pyrolised phaeoporphyrin c derivative was apparently also produced. Fucoxanthin was complently broken down during digestion, but some or all may have been converted to a less polar unidentified derivative. Some ingested diadinoxanthin sometimes appeared intact in faecal pellets. The conversion efficiency of chlorophll a to pyrophaeopigment a was not usualy 100%, but ingested chlorophyll a was less extensively destroyed than either chlorophll c or diadonoxanthin. The degree of destruction for the 3 pigmets varied in parallet and when it was relatively low the only fluorescent components found in faecal pellets, in appreciable amounts, were chlorophylls a and c and the 3 pyrophaeopigments. When the degree of pigment destruction was high, a number of unidentified fluorescent components wre also present in faecal pellets, which wre probably the products of more extensive chlorophyll degradation.

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Head, E., & Harris, L. (1992). Chlorophyll and carotenoid transformation and destruction by Calanus spp. grazing on diatoms. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 86, 229–238. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps086229

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