U. Riebesell et al., The effects of varying CO2 concentration on lipid composition and carbon isotope fractionation in Emiliania huxleyi, GEOCH COS A, 64(24), 2000, pp. 4179-4192
We have measured the stable carbon isotopic composition of bulk organic mat
ter (POC), alkenones, sterols, fatty acids, and phytol in the coccolithopho
rid Emiliania huxleyi grown in dilute batch cultures over a wide range of C
O2 concentrations (1.1-53.5 mu mol L-1). The carbon isotope fractionation o
f POC (epsilon (POC)) varied by ca. 7 parts per thousand and was positively
correlated with aqueous CO2 concentration [CO2aq]. While this result confi
rms general trends observed for the same alga grown in nitrogen-limited che
mostat cultures, considerable differences were obtained in absolute values
of epsilon (POC) and in the slope of the relationship of epsilon (POC) with
growth rate and [CO2aq]. Also, a significantly greater offset was obtained
between the delta C-13 of alkenones and bulk organic matter in this study
compared with previous work (5.4, cf. 3.8 parts per thousand). This suggest
s that the magnitude of the isotope offset may depend on growth conditions.
Relative to POC, individual fatty acids were depleted in C-13 by 2.3 parts
per thousand to 4.1 parts per thousand, phytol was depleted in C-13 by 1.9
parts per thousand, and the major sterol 24-methylcholesta-5,22E-dien-3 be
ta -ol was depleted in C-13 by 8.5 parts per thousand. This large spread of
delta C-13 values for different lipid classes in the same alga indicates t
he need for caution in organic geochemical studies when assigning different
sources to lipids that might have delta C-13 values differing by just a fe
w parts per thousand. Increases in [CO2aq] led to dramatic increases in the
alkenone contents per cell and as a proportion of organic carbon, but ther
e was no systematic effect on values of U-37(k') used for reconstructions o
f paleo sea surface temperature. Copyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.