6 research outputs found
Bulletin No. 18: Seaweeds of the Connecticut Shore: A Wader\u27s Guide
Illustrated guide to 60 different algae with keys to their identification. 36 pp. 1972
Bulletin No. 23: Plants and Animals of the Estuary
Descriptions and illustrations of over 70 estuarine species
Seasonal dynamics and recruitment strategies of the invasive seaweed Grateloupia doryphora (Halymeniaceae, Rhodophyta) in Narragansett Bay and Rhode Island Sound, Rhode Island, USA
The appearance of Grateloupia doryphora (Halymeniaceae, Rhodophyta) on the northeast coast of North America
Grateloupia doryphora (Halymeniaceae, Rhodophyta) in Rhode Island waters (USA): geographical expansion, morphological variations and associated algae
The genus Grateloupia C. Agardh (Halymeniaceae, Rhodophyta) in the Thau Lagoon (France, Mediterranean): A case study of marine plurispecific introductions
Based on morphological data and molecular analyses [Nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS), rbcL and mitochondrial cox2-cox3 spacer sequences] of Grateloupia spp. populations in the Thau Lagoon (France, Mediterranean) we demonstrated that at least five exotic species of Grateloupia were introduced. These include: (1) Grateloupia asiatica, a recently described species that was previously misidentified as G. filicina in Japan and Grateloupia sp. in the Thau Lagoon; (2) G. lanceolata from Japan; (3) G. luxurians, a Pacific species described as G. filicina var. luxurians; (4) G. patens from Japan; and (5) G. turuturu, a Japanese species previously misidentified as G. doryphora in the NE and NW Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea. These nonnative species probably were introduced in the Thau Lagoon in the 1970s along with the massive importations of Japanese oysters, Crassostrea gigas, into Europe for mariculture purposes. Since their introduction, they all have established large, reproductive populations with the exception of G. patens. The Mediterranean Grateloupia specimens are genetically and morphologically similar to Pacific specimens of the same species, although in the Thau Lagoon, G. asiatica specimens are morphologically more variable than those found in Japanese populations. This is the first report of G. asiatica in the Mediterranean Sea and Europe. Based on morphological data and molecular analyses (rbcL sequences) G. subpectinata is placed in synonymy with G. luxurians