Journal
ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 171-175Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/EN08025
Keywords
algae; arsenic; marine ecosystems; speciation
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Significant amounts of arsenobetaine ( up to 0.80 mu g Asg(-1) dry mass, representing 17% of the extractable arsenic) were found in the extracts of all four samples of the red alga Phyllophora antarctica collected from two sites in Antarctica ( Terra Nova Bay and Cape Evans). The assignment was made with high performance liquid chromatography inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (HPLC-ICPMS) based on exact cochromatography with a standard compound with two chromatographic systems ( cation-exchange and ion-pairing reversed-phase), each run under two sets of mobile phase conditions. Particular care was taken during sample preparation to ensure that the arsenobetaine was of algal origin and did not result from epiphytes associated with the alga. Another red alga, Iridaea cordata, collected from Terra Nova Bay, did not contain detectable concentrations of arsenobetaine. For both algal species, the majority of the extractable arsenic was present as arsenosugars. Confirmation that marine algae can contain significant amounts of arsenobetaine allows a simpler explanation for the widespread occurrence of this arsenical in marine animals.
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