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Seasonal variation in agar composition and properties from G racilaria gracilis ( G racilariales, R hodophyta) of the P atagonian coast of A rgentina
Author(s) -
Martín Lucas A.,
Rodríguez María C.,
Matulewicz María C.,
Fissore Elia.,
Gerschenson Lía N.,
Leonardi Patricia I.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
phycological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.438
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 1440-1835
pISSN - 1322-0829
DOI - 10.1111/pre.12000
Subject(s) - biology , agar , algae , spore , botany , composition (language) , substrate (aquarium) , agar plate , population , settling , food science , ecology , bacteria , linguistics , philosophy , genetics , demography , environmental engineering , sociology , engineering
Summary Seasonal variation of agar from specimens of a commercially exploited population of G racilaria gracilis ( S tackhouse) S teentoft, I rvine & F arnham in the P atagonian coast of A rgentina was studied. For each seasonal harvest, random samples of plants were pooled for subsequent polysaccharide extraction at different water temperatures and agar physico‐chemical properties and composition were determined. Both spring and summer plants yielded 30% and 41% of agar, respectively, which differed slightly in their at rest rheological behavior. S pring and summer plants produced strong gels (238 and 218 g cm −2 , respectively), but the latter gels had nil adhesiveness. In autumn plants, agar yield decayed to 19%, though the product still maintained similar gel strength (210 g cm −2 ). Adhesiveness in this product was at least an order of magnitude higher than in the others, concomitant with a peak in the formation of tetraspores and carpospores. This suggests a biological role for the galactan in the initial attachment of spores to the substrate. But since fall corresponds to the settling of reproductive structures, caution should be taken to harvest the algae once spores have been shed from mother plants.

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