Fuente: UH News
  Expuesto el: lunes, 23 de julio de 2012 20:27
  Autor: UH News
  Asunto: Mānoa: Scientists confirm existence of vitamin  "deserts" in the ocean
| University    of Hawaiʻi    at Mānoa Contact: Marcie    Grabowski, (808) 956-3151 
 
 Using    a newly developed analytical technique, a scientist from the University of    Hawaii at Manoa and colleagues from the University of Southern California and    Universidad Autonoma de Baja California were the first to identify    long-hypothesized vitamin B deficient zones in the ocean. "This    is another twist to what limits life in the ocean," said Sergio    Sañudo-Wilhelmy, professor of biological and earth sciences at the USC    Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, and lead author on a paper    about the vitamin-depleted zones that appeared in Proceedings of the    National Academy of Sciences on July 23, 2012. B    vitamins are organic compounds dissolved in the ocean and are important for    living cells to function. Zones poor in B vitamins may inhibit the growth and    proliferation of phytoplankton, which are tiny microorganisms at the base of    the food chain in the ocean. "An    important result of our study is that the concentrations of the five major B    vitamins vary independently and appear to have different sources and    sink," says co-author David Karl, Professor of Oceanography and Director    of the Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education (C-MORE) at    UH Manoa.  "This could lead to complex interactions among    populations of microbes, from symbiosis to intense competition." In    addition to being food for the tiniest sea animals, phytoplankton also absorb    carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, an important process when levels of    atmospheric carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels are the highest    they have been in half a million years.  The    team developed a new method of concentrating water samples and then analyzing    them using a mass spectrometer, which identifies and measures the quantity of    an unknown compound in a given sample by first ionizing and breaking-up the    compound and then quantifying the fragmented ions or molecules    produced.  In    their PNAS article, the researchers are sharing their technique with their    colleagues around the world to help advance related research. "The most    important thing is that everyone with the right equipment can do it,"    Sañudo-Wilhelmy said. Sañudo-Wilhelmy    said he next plans to investigate what causes varying amounts of B-vitamins    in different regions of the ocean, and try to determine exactly how that    affects phytoplankton blooms.  This includes a comprehensive set of    experiments in the North Pacific Ocean as part of C-MORE's ongoing Hawaii    Ocean Experiment. Periodically,    phytoplankton experience population explosions known as "blooms." In the case    of certain phytoplankton that produce toxins, these blooms become toxic, such    as the so-called "red" tides. Temperature, sunlight and nutrients in the    water all appear to influence these blooms, but the exact causes have yet to    be pinned down. One hypothesis is that vitamins B7 and B12 may act as    triggers. "It's    crazy that after 100 years of study, we still don't fully understand what    controls different phytoplankton blooms in the ocean," Sañudo-Wilhelmy said. Sañudo-Wilhelmy    collaborated on this research with William M. Berelson, Lynda Cutter, Emily    Smail, Laura Gomez-Consarnau, Eric A. Webb and Maria Prokopenko from USC    Dornsife; as well as Karl from the University of Hawaii at Manoa; and    Reginaldo Durazo of the Universidad Autonoma de Baja California en Ensenada,    Mexico. The    National Science Foundation (Chemical Oceanography Program and Office of    Integrative Activities) supported this work.  Additional support was    provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. 
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