23 research outputs found

    Food habits of the farmer damselfish Stegastes nigricans inferred by stomach content, stable isotope, and fatty acid composition analyses

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    The territorial damselfish, Stegastes nigricans, maintains algal farms by excluding invading herbivores and weeding unpalatable algae from its territories. In Okinawa, Japan, S. nigricans farms are exclusively dominated by Polysiphonia sp., a highly digestible filamentous rhodophyte. This study was aimed at determining the diet of S. nigricans in Okinawa and its dependency on these almost-monoculture algal farms based on stomach content and chemical analyses. Stomach content analyses revealed that all available food items in the algal farms (i. e., algae, benthic animal inhabitants, trapped detritus) were contained in fish stomachs, but amorphous organic matter accounted for 68% of the contents. Therefore, carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios and fatty acid (FA) compositions were analyzed to trace items actually assimilated in their bodies. Stable isotope analyses showed that benthic animals were an important food source even for this farmer fish. Two essential fatty acids (EFAs), 20:4n6 and 20:5n3, which are produced only by rhodophytes among available food items, were rich in the muscle tissue of S. nigricans as well as in algal mats and detritus, suggesting that algal mats contribute EFAs to S. nigricans directly and indirectly through the food web. In conclusion, S. nigricans ingested algal mats, detritus, and benthic animals maintained within its farm. Algae and detritus were original sources of EFAs, and benthic animals, which were much more abundant in the farms than in outside territories, provided a nitrogen-rich dietary source for the fish

    Physiological, biochemical and ultrastructural responses of the green macroalga Urospora penicilliformis from Arctic Spitsbergen to UV radiation

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    Exposure of the filamentous turf green alga Urospora penicilliformis to ambient and artificial ultraviolet radiation (UVR) revealed a considerable resilient species. This explains the ability of this alga to thrive in the middleupper intertidal zones of the Arctic sea where it is periodically exposed to environmental extremes. A transient UVR effect on photosynthesis under photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) + UV-A and PAR + UV-A + UV-B was found, but dynamic recovery of photoinhibition was observed immediately after reduction of the photon fluence rate of PAR in the absence or presence of background UVR under laboratory and natural solar radiation, respectively. Chlorophylls, carotenoids, and xanthophyll cycle pigments (violaxanthin, antheraxanthin, and zeaxanthin) concentrations were not significantly different between freshly collected samples and filaments exposed to additional laboratory radiation treatment. The ultrastructure of the U. penicilliformis gametophytes showed that the cells are well adapted to UVR. No significant ultrastructural alterations were observed in filaments exposed to different spectral irradiance in the laboratory compared to in situ acclimated specimen. The antioxidant α-tocopherol was detected in minute quantity while the search for flavonoid-like compounds was negative. Other UV screening strategies or certain genetically fixed physiological protective mechanism could be operating in this species responsible for their occurrence in higher shoreline and ecological success. Further molecular and biochemical studies are needed to elucidate the stress resistance in this turf alga. There is an indication that the extremely thick cell wall of U. penicilliformis gametophytes covered with mucilage sheath and dense layer of mineral depositions may provide a shield against unfavorable environmental conditions in general and against UVR in particular

    Seasonal and within-plant variation in fatty acid content and composition in the brown seaweed Spatoglossum macrodontum (Dictyotales, Phaeophyceae)

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    We investigated seasonal and within-plant variation in total fatty acids (TFAs) and biomass increase in the tropical brown seaweed Spatoglossum macrodontum which was sampled from Magnetic Island (Queensland, Australia) at monthly intervals over 1 year. In this habitat, S. macrodontum is an annual species with a growth period from June to September where mean biomass changed from 8- to 136-g fresh weight. Although TFA content and fatty acid (FA) composition were not directly correlated to individual plant size, there was clear seasonal variation in TFA content with a peak in July (82.7 mg g−1 dry weight (dw)) followed by a 30 % decline in August and little subsequent variation from September to November (65.9–55.5 mg g−1 dw). The FA profile was rich in polyunsaturated FAs (PUFAs) (39 %); however, there was a change to a higher percentage of saturated FAs (SFAs) (42 %) and reduced PUFA (31 %) as plants reached the end of the growth period. Averaged across sampling periods, TFA content ranged from 77 mg g−1 dw in the tips to 30 mg g−1 dw in the base section. While PUFA content (37–38 %) was similar across sections, the base had less SFAs and a higher content of monounsaturated FAs (MUFAs) (29 %). These results are the first data on the seasonal biomass increase and the temporal and internal variations in FAs for this species with important implications when targeting large brown seaweeds as a source of FAs for nutraceuticals (PUFA(n-3), 21.8 % of TFA) or chemicals (C18:1 (n-9), 17.6 % of TFA). © 2014, Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht
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