Lipids and fatty acid composition of particulate matter in the North Atlantic: importance of spatial heterogeneity, season and community structure - Université Pierre et Marie Curie Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Marine Biology Année : 2014

Lipids and fatty acid composition of particulate matter in the North Atlantic: importance of spatial heterogeneity, season and community structure

Résumé

Lipid class profiles and total fatty acid composition of particulate matter were studied in the northeast Atlantic during the spring bloom and fall. Eddies of known physical and chemical properties were sampled at different depths. HPLC pigment data were used to characterize the phytoplankton communities. In spring, a dominance of prymnesiophytes was recorded at all depths, while in fall prochlorophytes dominated near the surface and prymnesiophytes only at deep chlorophyll maximum. Lipid classes included triglycerides, sterols, glycolipids and phospholipids. A differential relationship between phytoplankton abundance and lipid accumulation was observed: spring lipid concentrations were positively related to phytoplankton biomass, while fall particulate lipid did not show any relationship. The main feature was a northward increase in lipid concentrations unrelated to the mesoscale hydrological structures. Polar lipids dominated over neutral acyl-glycerols with phospholipids dominating over glycolipids in spring, while glycolipids dominated in fall. This resulted from different nutrient availability with a dominance of flagellates associated with mesotrophy in spring and of picophytoplankton associated with oligotrophy in fall. In terms of fatty acids, factorial correspondence analyses illustrate the influence of seasonally changing assemblages: (1) in spring, the main source of variability was the bloom with an opposition between bloom sites characterized by n-3 and n-6 PUFA, and more detrital deep samples characterized by saturated, monoenoic and branched acids; (2) fall fatty acid profiles were similar at all depths and very close to those observed for spring deep samples. Comparison of pigment and fatty acids using redundancy analysis suggested that pelagophytes were linked to saturated and branched acids. It also showed that prymnesiophytes and prochlorophytes were significantly associated with n-6 and n-3 PUFA. The spring period illustrated the complexity of these relationships with dinoflagellates and prymnesiophytes linked with n-3 PUFA, diatoms linked with palmitoleic and myristic acids, and pelagophytes linked with n-6 PUFA and higher-chain-length monoenes.

Domaines

Océanographie
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Dates et versions

hal-03502765 , version 1 (26-12-2021)

Identifiants

Citer

P. Mayzaud, M. Boutoute, S. Gasparini, L. Mousseau. Lipids and fatty acid composition of particulate matter in the North Atlantic: importance of spatial heterogeneity, season and community structure. Marine Biology, 2014, 161 (9), pp.1951-1971. ⟨10.1007/s00227-014-2476-9⟩. ⟨hal-03502765⟩
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