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Environmental Chemistry Environmental Chemistry Society
Environmental problems - Chemical approaches
RESEARCH ARTICLE

A Rapid Method for Determining Lipid Fraction Ratios of Hard Corals under Varying Sediment and Light Regimes

Sandra M. Saunders A C , Ben Radford A , Sarah A. Bourke A , Zoe Thiele A , Tina Bech A B and Jerome Mardon A B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Disciplines of Chemistry and Geography, School of Biomedical, Biomolecular and Chemical Sciences and Earth and Geographical Sciences, University of Western Australia, Nedlands 6009, WA, Australia.

B Present address: The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Frederiksberg C 1870, Denmark.

C Corresponding author. Email: saunders@cyllene.uwa.eu.au

Environmental Chemistry 2(4) 331-336 https://doi.org/10.1071/EN05043
Submitted: 9 June 2005  Accepted: 28 October 2005   Published: 8 December 2005

Environmental Context. Monitoring the health of coral reef systems is vitally important to maintain and manage these threatened, complex and biodiverse natural ecosystems. Although total lipid content has been suggested as a potential index of coral condition, current methods of measurement are time consuming, technically challenging and expensive. These limitations have prohibited the application of coral lipid content as an impact-monitoring tool. The development of a practical and rapid method to determine lipid fraction ratios has the potential to lead towards an effective tool for coral reef monitoring.

Abstract. Lipid content has been used as a measure of energetic status and condition in a number of fish and invertebrate species and can potentially be applied to hard corals. However, common methods for measuring lipid content are time consuming, technically challenging and expensive and these limitations have prohibited the application of lipid content as an impact-monitoring tool. To overcome these limitations, a rapid low-tech method for determining neutral to polar lipid ratios from hard coral tissue samples has been developed. This paper describes the development of the method together with a preliminary application of the technique carried out in a field study to determine whether the relative amounts of non-polar storage lipid to polar structural lipid may provide insight into the nutritional condition of individual coral colonies under differing environmental stresses. Variation in the lipid ratios of the hard coral Acropora nobilis, collected from the Montebello Islands off Western Australia, was correlated with local light and sediment regimes. This initial application of the method has demonstrated the viability of the technique, which subsequently has the potential to be applied in the analysis of a large number of samples as would be required in environmental monitoring.

Keywords. : coral — environmental assessment — lipid fraction ratio


Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of MScience, Apache Energy PLC and Hamersley Iron Pty Ltd.


References


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Appendix 1.  Appendix 1. Tukey honestly significant difference test for ANOVA interactions Time × Site
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