An edition of Phytoplankton pigments (2011)

Phytoplankton pigments

characterization, chemotaxonomy, and applications in oceanography

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December 3, 2022 | History
An edition of Phytoplankton pigments (2011)

Phytoplankton pigments

characterization, chemotaxonomy, and applications in oceanography

  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

"Pigments act as tracers to elucidate the fate of phytoplankton in the world's oceans and are often associated with important biogeochemical cycles related to carbon dynamics in the oceans. They are increasingly used in in situ and remote-sensing applications, detecting algal biomass and major taxa through changes in water colour. This book is a follow-up to the 1997 volume Phytoplankton Pigments in Oceanography (UNESCO Press). Since then, there have been many advances concerning phytoplankton pigments. This book includes recent discoveries on several new algal classes particularly for the picoplankton, and on new pigments. It also includes many advances in methodologies, including liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and developments and updates on the mathematical methods used to exploit pigment information and extract the composition of phytoplankton communities. The book is invaluable primarily as a reference for students, researchers and professionals in aquatic science, biogeochemistry and remote sensing"--

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English

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Cover of: Phytoplankton pigments
Phytoplankton pigments: characterization, chemotaxonomy, and applications in oceanography
2011, Cambridge University Press
in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Machine generated contents note: List of contributors
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of symbols
Part I. Chlorophylls and Carotenoids: 1. Microalgal classes and their signature pigments S. W. Jeffrey, S. W. Wright and M. Zapata
2. Recent advances in chlorophyll and bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis R. J. Porra, U. Oster and H. Scheer
3. Carotenoid metabolism in phytoplankton M. Lohr
Part II. Methodology Guidance: 4. New HPLC separation techniques J. L. Garrido, R. L. Airs, F. Rodri;guez, L. Van Heukelem and M. Zapata
5. The importance of a quality assurance plan for method validation and minimizing uncertainties in the HPLC analysis of phytoplankton pigments L. Van Heukelem and S. B. Hooker
Appendix: a symbology and vocabulary for an HPLC lexicon S. B. Hooker and L. Van Heukelem
6. Quantitative interpretation of chemotaxonomic pigment data H. W. Higgins, S. W. Wright and L. Schlüter
7. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry for pigment analysis R. L. Airs and J. L. Garrido
8. Multivariate analysis of extracted pigments using spectrophotometric and spectrofluorometric methods J. Neveux, J. Seppa;la
and Y. Dandonneau
Appendix: a proven simultaneous equation assay for chlorophylls a and b using aqueous acetone and similar assays for recalcitrant algae R. J. Porra
Part III. Water-Soluble 'Pigments': 9. Phycobiliproteins K.-H. Zhao, R. J. Porra and H. Scheer
10. UV-absorbing 'pigments': mycosporine-like amino acids J. I. Carreto, S. Roy, K. Whitehead, C. Llewellyn and M. O. Carignan
Part IV. Selected Pigment Applications in Oceanography: 11. Pigments and photoacclimation processes C. Brunet, G. Johnsen, J. Lavaud and S. Roy
12. Pigment-based measurements of phytoplankton rates A. Guttierez-Rodriguez and M. Latasa
13. In vivo bio-optical properties of phytoplankton pigments G. Johnsen, A. Bricaud, N. Nelson, B. B. Pre;zelin and R. R. Bidigare
14. Optical monitoring of phytoplankton bloom pigment signatures G. Johnsen, M. A. Moline, L. H. Pettersson, J. L. Pinckney, D. V. Pozdnyakov, E. S. Egeland and O. M. Schofield
Appendix: harmful algae toxins and pigments E. S. Egeland
Part V. Future Perspectives: 15. Perspectives on future directions C. Llewellyn, S. Roy, G. Johnsen, E. S. Egeland, M. Chauton, G. Hallegraeff, M. Lohr, U. Oster, R. J. Porra, H. Scheer and K.-H. Zhao
Part VI. Aids for Practical Laboratory Work: Appendix A. Update on filtration, storage and extraction solvents J. L. Pinckney, D. F. Millie and L. Van Heukelem
Appendix B. The pigment analyst's guide to HPLC hardware A. R. Neeley, C. S. Thomas, S. B. Hooker and L. Van Heukelem
Appendix C. Minimum identification criteria for identifying phytoplankton pigments E. S. Egeland
Appendix D. Phytoplankton cultures for standard pigments and their suppliers S. Roy, S. W. Wright and S. W. Jeffrey
Appendix E. Commercial suppliers of phytoplankton pigments E. S. Egeland and L. Schlüter
Part VII: Phytoplankton pigments data sheets E. S. Egeland
Index.

Edition Notes

Published in
Cambridge, New York
Series
Cambridge environmental chemistry series

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
579.8/1776
Library of Congress
QK933 .P496 2011

The Physical Object

Pagination
p. cm.

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25170108M
Internet Archive
phytoplanktonpig00roys
ISBN 13
9781107000667
LCCN
2011009229
OCLC/WorldCat
714729250

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December 3, 2022 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
January 18, 2012 Created by LC Bot import new book