OCCURRENCE OF AN ISOPRENOID C25 DIUNASATURATED ALKENE AND HIGH NEUTRAL LIPID CONTENT IN ANTRACTIC SEA‐ICE DIATOM COMMUNITIES 1

The lipid and hydrocarbon composition of natural populations of diatom communities collected during the austral spring bloom of 1985 in the sea‐ice at McMurdo Sound, Antartica was analyzed by TLC‐FID, GC and GC‐MS. Sea‐ice diatom communities were dominated by Amphiprora sp., Nitzschia stellata Manguin and Berkeleya sp. at Cape Armitage; N. stellata, Amphiprora, Pleurosigma, N. kerguelensis (O'Meara) Hasle and some small centric diatoms adjacent to the Erebus Ice Tongue; and Porosira pseudodenticulata (Hustedt) Jouse at Wohlschlag Bay. Lipid distributions of the sea ice diatom communities from the Cape Armitage and Ereus sites were characterized by high concentrations of tracylaglecycerol (triacylglycerolplar lipid = 1.0 to 1.5). The hydrocarbon n‐C21:6, common in temperate diatoms, and an isoprenoid C25 diunsaturated alkene were the dominant hydrocarons detected at these two sites. Hydrogenation of the C25 diene produced the known alkane 2, 6, 10, 14‐tetramethyl‐7‐ (3‐methylpentyl)‐pentadecane. The C25 diene is one of several structurally related hydrocarbons reported in many estuarine, coastal and ocean ic sediments. We propose that certain species of diatoms are a likely source of these alkenes in sediments. The first reported biological occurrence of the C25 diene in the green seaweed Enteromorpha prolifera may have been due to the presence of epiphytic microalgae in the field sample analysed.

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