2 resultados para CRITICAL MICELLE CONCENTRATION

em DigitalCommons - The University of Maine Research


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Marine invertebrate deposit feeders secrete surfactants into their gut fluid in concentrations sufficient to induce micelle formation, enhancing solubilization of sedimentary lipids. We isolated and identified 3 related surfactant molecules from the deposit-feeding polychaete lugworm Arenicola marina. Surfactants were isolated and separated by a combination of solvent extraction and thin-layer and gas chromatography. Identification was performed using mass and infrared spectrometry, coupled to various derivatization and hydrolysis reactions. A. marina produces a mixture of related yet distinct anionic surfactants composed of branched, C9, saturated and unsaturated fatty acids that are amide linked to leucine or glycine residues, showing some similarity to crustacean surfactants. The critical micelle concentration of the mixture of these surfactants in gut fluid was about 2 mM, and total concentrations ranged from 5.5 to 19.5 mM. The hydrophilic amide linkage helps to explain previous observations that gut surfactants do not adsorb onto sediment transiting the gut.

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Management plans to reduce human-caused deaths of North Atlantic right whales Eubalaena glacialis depend, in part, on knowing when and where right whales are likely to be found. Local environmental conditions that influence movements of feeding right whales, such as ultra-dense copepod patches, are unpredictable and ephemeral. We examined the utility of using the regional-scale mean copepod concentration as an indicator of the abundance of right whales in 2 critical habitats off the northeastern coast of the United States: Cape Cod Bay and Great South Channel. Right whales are usually found in Cape Cod Bay during the late winter and early spring, and in the Great South Channel during the late spring and early summer. We found a significant positive relationship between mean concentration of the copepod Calanus finmarchicus in the western Gulf of Maine and the frequency of right whale sightings in the Great South Channel. In Cape Cod Bay we found a significant positive relationship between the mean concentration of other copepods (largely Pseudocalanus spp. and Centropages spp.) and the frequency of right whale sightings. This information could be used to further our understanding of the environmental factors that drive seasonal movement and aggregation of right whales in the Gulf of Maine, and it offers a tool to resource managers and modelers who seek to predict the movements of right whales based upon the concentration of copepods.