Abstract

The chemical species of iodine in seven marine algae Codium fragile, Ulva pertusa, Monostroma nitidum, Gracilaria confervoides, Sargassum Kjellmanianum, Dictyopteris divaricata and Laminaria japonica were studied using neutron activation analysis combined with chemical separation. The contents of total iodine, water-soluble iodine, soluble organic iodine, I − and IO 3 − were determined. The results indicate that the chemical species and contents of iodine in various algae are remarkably different. The highest iodine content of 734 mg/kg (wet basis) was found in Laminaria japonica, with 99.2% of the total iodine being water soluble. The iodine contents of the other six algae are lower and soluble iodine makes up 16–41% of the total. In the aqueous leachate, iodine is mainly I −, which amounts to 61–93% of total water-soluble iodine; the percentages of organic iodine making up 5.5–37.4%, while the contents of IO 3 − are the lowest, 1.4–4.5%. This result suggests that the mechanism of iodine enrichment is different for various algae and that its bioavailability varies as well.

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