Title of article :
Accumulation of sedimentary photosynthetic pigments characterized by pyropheophorbide a and steryl chlorin esters (SCEs) in a shallow eutrophic coastal lake (Lake Hamana, Japan)
Author/Authors :
Nobuyasu Itoh، نويسنده , , Yukinori Tani، نويسنده , , Yuko Soma، نويسنده , , Mitsuyuki Soma، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
We investigated the factors controlling the composition of sedimentary photosynthetic pigments in Lake Hamana (Japan), a shallow (12 m),
brackish, holomictic lake, by analyzing photosynthetic pigments and the sterol composition of steryl esters of pyropheophorbide a (steryl chlorin
esters, SCEs) in the water column and surface sediments. The mean annual composition of carotenoids in the water was quite different from that
in the surface sediments. We evaluated the relative accumulation efficiency of individual pigments in the sediments by comparing ratios of individual
pigment concentrations relative to total chlorophyll a (TChl-a) in sediment to those in the water column. The relative accumulation
efficiencies decreased in the following order: lutein > diatoxanthin > b,b-carotene > zeaxanthin > b,3-carotene > alloxanthin[fucoxanthin.
The ratio of total pyro-derivatives of chlorophyll a, formed through the grazing of algae by zooplankton, to TChl-a in the surface sediments
was much higher (0.24e0.33) than that in the water column, which was less than 0.03 even in the deepest water (10 m). The summed concentration
of pyropheophytin a and SCEs (TPyphe-a) showed positive and significant relationships (r2 > 0.56, n ¼ 7) with residual carotenoids in
sediments. These results suggest that incorporation of algal pigments in fecal pellets through grazing by zooplankton enhances pigment preservation
during early diagenesis at the sediment surface. Moreover, sedimentary carotenoid compositions were consistent with the sterol compositions
of sedimentary SCE fractions. Selective grazing by zooplankton was thus a primary factor determining the composition of sedimentary
carotenoids in this lake.
Keywords :
algae , sediment , photosynthetic pigments , water , Lake Hamana
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science