Pigment distribution patterns were investigated in the marginal ice zone of the Bellingshausen Sea and across the Drake Passage during the austral spring of November/December 1992. Elevated chlorophyll a (chl a) and fucoxanthin levels were observed at the Sub-Antarctic and Polar Fronts in the Drake Passage and at the Southern Polar Front in the Bellingshausen Sea. Investigations at 5 stations along 85 degrees W in the Bellingshausen Sea between 70.5 degrees S and 67.5 degrees S revealed high concentrations of chi a (up to 24000 ng l(-1) ice melt) and fucoxanthin in hard pack ice samples and very low levels of pigments in the underlying water column (< 100 ng l(-1)). At two ice melt stations, pigment concentrations in the ice were considerably lower and chi a in the upper mixed layer ranged from 120-250 ng l(-1), with increased levels of hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin and chlorophyll b (chI b). In open water, the high chi a band at the Southern Polar Front (up to 2400 ng l(-1)) was associated with elevated fucoxanthin concentrations. Integrated concentrations, pigment ratios and a conversion of accessory pigments to chi a equivalents indicated that diatoms (fucoxanthin) were the most important group in the ice (> 70%), although prymnesiophytes (hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin) and green algae (chl b) were present in smaller proportions. Diatoms dominated at the open water stations(> 60%) and were prominent in the water column under the pack ice (52-61%). However, at the ice melt stations, prymnesiophytes (40-45%), green algae (11-13%) and, to a lesser extent, cryptophytes (4-6%; alloxanthin) collectively contributed more to the chi a biomass than the diatoms (37-42%). Budgeting the proportions of chloropigments indicated an increase in chlorophyllide a and phaeopigments from the ice to the northern open water stations, with chlorophyllide a being prominent in the upper water column and in the ice. Export fluxes of phytoplankton-carbon and phytodetritus in the upper 100 m were estimated from chloropigment inventories and residence times of Po-210 radionuclide reported by Shimmield et al. (1995) [Shimmield, G.B., Ritchie, G., Fileman, T.W., 1995. The impact of marginal zone processes on the distribution of Pb-210, Po-210 and Th-234 and implications for new production in the Bellingshausen Sea Antarctica. Deep-Sea Res. II, 42 (1995) 1313-1335], revealing very low fluxes at the ice stations and up to 29 mg phyto-C m(-2) day(-1) at the open water high chlorophyll locality.