a b s t r a c tAn improved HPLC method is presented, which allows separation and quantification of a broad range of lipid classes of marine zooplankton with special regard to neutral lipids. Marine zooplankton species often produce high amounts of exceptional lipids, especially at high latitudes, in order to cope with the harsh environmental conditions and strong seasonality in food supply. Major neutral lipid classes are wax esters, triacylglycerols, diacylglycerol ethers, free fatty alcohols and sterols. Neutral and polar lipids were separated and identified on a monolithic silica column (Chromolith ® Performance-Si) using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with an evaporative light scattering detector (ELSD). The method resolves a broad spectrum of lipids, varying in polarity from squalene to lysophosphatidylcholine in a single run. The total run time was 35 min including column re-equilibration. The calibration was made at levels of 0.1-60 g lipid/injection, but a 10-15-fold greater amount can be injected if single lipid classes need to be separated, e.g. for further determination of individual fatty acids. The method was applied to representative Arctic zooplankton species (copepods, pteropods, euphausiids and ctenophores) that are known to biosynthesize in particular neutral lipids like diacylglycerol ethers and free fatty alcohols.
Several vegetation belts stretch continuously from Europe to Asia, taiga and steppe being most prominent. Numerous plant species within these belts share a conspicuous distribution area, which is longitudinally contracted or disrupted approximately along longitude 70 degrees E. To date no hypothesis for this intriguing distribution pattern has been put forward. We detected molecular footprints in the contemporary genetic composition in nuclear DNA (ITS1, ITS2) and chloroplast DNA (trnL-trnF spacer region) of the steppe element Clausia aprica (Brassicaceae) providing evidence for a severe longitudinal range split and genetic differentiation east of the Ural Mountains about 1 million years ago caused by Quaternary climatic oscillations. Clausia aprica provides the first phylogeographical analysis on the intraspecific evolution of an Eurasian steppe plant.
Polar regions are characterized by a strong seasonality in primary production and distinct fluctuations in food supply. The storage of energy in the form of lipids is expected to follow a seasonal pattern; however, year-round observations are lacking. The seasonal variations of lipid classes and fatty acid compositions of four pelagic amphipods have been investigated. Individuals were collected at various depths during summer and winter expeditions to the Fram Strait and Svalbard archipelago (788-818N). Our results show a year-round dominance of wax esters and triacylglycerols over phospholipids for Themisto abyssorum, Themisto libellula, Themisto compressa and Cyclocaris guilelmi. High levels of the Calanus-marker fatty acids 20:1 and 22:1 (both isomers) during summer and winter indicated that all four species are part of the Calanus-based food web. Specific fatty acid trophic markers for diatoms and flagellates indicated that the lipid-based energy transfer could be traced back to the respective algal sources. We found a distinct difference between animals collected from very deep and shallow waters, which indicates that the lipid reservoir of these amphipods and their biochemical modifications seem to buffer seasonal variations in available prey and to allow an active, predatory lifestyle year-round in Arctic waters.
Artificially inseminated eggs of feral North Sea whiting (Merlangius merlangus) were incubated in the laboratory in order to determine reproductive success. After incubation, two measures for reproductive success, total hatch and viable hatch, were determined and correlated with chlorinated hydrocarbon residues in the respective ovaries. From their specific toxicities and the sum of all determined chlorinated hydrocarbon contaminants, a contamination factor (CF) was calculated. Significant negative correlations were found between total hatch and DDT, including its metabolites (ZDDT), dieldrin and the CF. ZDDT and the CF were also negatively correlated with viable hatch. A threshold value of ovary contamination above which impairment of reproductive success was likely to occur was set at > 200 ~tg kg -~ wet wt. for ZPCB, > 20 ~tg kg -1 wet wt. for ZDDT and > 10 ~g kg -1 wet wt. for dieldrin.
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