The steroidal components of a Red Sea sponge, Biemna fortis, were fractionated through reversed phase HPLC. and analyzed by a combination of physical methods, including high resolution GC./MS. and 360 MHz 'H-NMR. The sponge contains five conventional d5-sterols, la-c, le, l g , which comprise about 25% of the mixture and 2,5% of gorgosterol (lh), a sterol never found before in Porifera. Three ~l~~~~~~-s t e r o l s were also present as major components in the mixture ( N 70%): cholesta-5,7,22-trien-3,f?-ol (Za), ergosta-5,7,22-trien-3/?-01 (2c) and (24R)-ethylcholesta-5,7,22-trien-3~-oI (2e) whereas two new tetra-unsaturated sterols were identified in minor amounts (2%): ergosta-5,7,9 (1 l), 22-tetraen-3P-01 (3c) and 24(-ethylcholesta-5,7,9 (1 l), 22-tetraen-3P-01 (3e or 3f). NMR. spectroscopy made possible the assignment of a 24R configuration for all the C(24) substituted sterols isolated in sufficient amount from the mixture. The possible symbiotic, dietary or biosynthetic origins of these sterols are discussed.Introduction. -Marine organisms such as sponges constitute a rich source of sterols possessing unusual side-chains or unconventional ring systems [2-61. Besides their chemical structure elucidation such sterols raise interesting questions in terms of biosynthesis and biological function [7]. Against this background and in our continuing search for key biosynthetic intermediates among the minor and trace components of marine sterol mixtures [ 11, we report the composition of the Red Sea sponge Biemna fortis.Results. -The gas-liquid chromatographic (GC.) and combined gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric (GCJMS.) analyses of the free sterol mixture allow the resolution of the number, the identity, and the amount of the components. These data are corroborated by the GC./MS. analysis on capillary columns of the trimethylsilyl ethers of the mixture. Further separations of the free sterols by high I) Part XIV in the Stanford series 'Minor and Trace Sterols in Marine Invertebrates'. Part XIII: [l].