“…Chloroform can form a reactive dichlorocarbene species under certain conditions and lead to the formation of gem-dichlorovinylidene moieties. 12 However, marine natural products, such as the taveunamides, mutafuran, (Z)-and (E)-antazirine, and several analogous azirinecarboxylates that were isolated from the sponge Dysidea f ragilis, have been shown to contain gem-dihalovinylidene moieties compris- ing only bromine or chlorine or atoms of each element, thus supporting their natural biosynthetic origins. 4,13 Chemical profiling of extracts produced from 10 morphologically identified Symploca spp., comprising two fieldidentified collections from American Samoa, one from Saipan, six from Panama, and one grown in the laboratory from the Pasteur Culture Collection (PCC8002), was achieved using LC-MS/MS and molecular networking untargeted metabolomics (Figure 1, A).…”