Lipids and their fatty acids are vital to life and are present in all living organisms. These biological compounds play essential roles in cell and tissue membranes functioning, energy storage, thermal insulation, and chemical communication.
Determining the lipid content and fatty acid composition of aquatic organisms has been of major interest in trophic ecology, aquaculture, and nutrition for more than half a century. Although protocols for lipid analysis are well-described, their application to aquatic sciences often requires modifications to adapt to field conditions and sample type. There are likely to be nearly as many variations of procedures as there are laboratories.
Yet, not all are suitable to aquatic samples. Identifying the most appropriate protocols and the best practices in fatty acid analysis of aquatic organisms may prove a difficult task for novices with limited biochemistry background. Available literature is indeed abundant and highly diverse, and many studies do not fully describe their methodology.
Tha latest Editor's Choice article is a review that emerges from the technical workshops held during the international conference
Lipids in the oceans (Brest, France, November 2018), in which all authors of the manuscript took part. In this work,
they present the current state of knowledge of methods dedicated to both marine and freshwater lipid analyses, from sampling to data treatment. Practical questions are addressed that are not formulated in papers and textbooks, but that are essential to obtain reliable fatty acid profiles. The paper provides recommendations for best practices in field situations, and advocate for protocol standardization and inter-laboratory calibration.