Authors
Alexandra Bazes, Alla Silkina, Philippe Douzenel, Fabienne Faÿ, Nelly Kervarec, Danièle Morin, Jean-Pascal Berge, Nathalie Bourgougnon
Publication date
2009/8
Journal
Journal of Applied Phycology
Volume
21
Pages
395-403
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
One of the most promising alternatives to toxic heavy metal-based paints is offered by the development of antifouling coatings in which the active ingredients are compounds naturally occurring in marine organisms and operating as natural antisettlement agents. Sessile marine macroalgae are remarkably free from settlement by fouling organisms. They produce a wide variety of chemically active metabolites in their surroundings, potentially as an aid to protect themselves against other settling organisms. In this study, a dichloromethane extract from the brown seaweed Sargassum muticum was tested in situ and, after 2 months of immersion, showed less fouling organisms on paints in which the extract was included, compared to paints containing only copper after 2 months of immersion. No barnacles or mussels have been observed on the test rack. Identification by NMR and GC/MS of the effective …
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