Abstract
The marine diatoms Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Thalassiosira pseudonana have been shown to produce apo-fucoxanthinoid compounds which act as feeding deterrents against the harpacticoid copepod Tigriopus californicus. The amounts and types of apo-fucoxanthinoids produced were species specific. Th. pseudonana produced small quantities of apo-12′-fucoxanthinal and apo-13′-fucoxanthinone only during senescence, while P. tricornutum produced much greater quantities of these two compounds during both log and senescence phases, in addition to producing a third compound, apo-10-fucoxanthinal, only during senescence. For both species, production of apo-fucoxanthinoids increased as the cells entered senescence phase due to phosphate limitation. The amounts of apo-fucoxanthinoids necessary to reduce feeding in T. californicus by 50% ranged from 2.22 to 20.2 ppm. This range was approximately 1000 times lower than the total apo-fucoxanthinoid concentration in P. tricornutum. The amounts of apo-fucoxanthinoids necessary to cause a 50% mortality in a population of T. californicus ranged from 36.8 to 76.7 ppm. Thus, these compounds are present in concentrations which may have ecological significance in the control of bloom formation and grazing. The production of apo-fucoxanthinoids may be a phenomenon common to many diatoms, particularly as they enter senescence due to nutrient limitation.
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