Abstract

Summary1. The enormous size and spatial heterogeneity of Lake Baikal require rapid methods for large sample sets. We therefore tested the applicability of a novel, high‐performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)‐based, combination of methods for analysing phytoplankton. In July 2001, samples were collected in a transect across the lake at various depths down to 30 m. Phytoplankton (>3 μm) and autotrophic picoplankton (APP) were counted under light and epifluorescence microscopes, respectively. Pigments were analysed with HPLC.2. The pigment data allowed the contributions of the dominant phytoplankton groups to the total chlorophylla(Chla) in the lake to be estimated by multiple linear regression and by the CHEMTAX matrix factorisation program. Three marker pigments, fucoxanthin, lutein and zeaxanthin, were shown to be useful indicators of the abundance and spatial distribution of certain phytoplankton groups. The relative contributions of the various phytoplankton groups to the total Chlain the lake determined using these marker pigments were similar, but not identical, to those determined by cell counts.3. Pigment analyses of isolated strains from Lake Baikal and some European lakes confirmed that phycoerythrin‐containing Cyanobacteria with very high amounts of zeaxanthin were responsible for the low Chla/zeaxanthin ratios of the water samples. A picoplanktonic species of Eustigmatophyceae was isolated from the lake. Its high violaxanthin content, responsible for very low Chla/violaxanthin ratios of some water samples, can be used to estimate the contribution of this group to total Chla.

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