Sargassum: Difference between revisions

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== Ecology ==
== Ecology ==
<span class="floatright" style="height:288px; width:214;">https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/76/Fish4283_-_Flickr_-_NOAA_Photo_Library.jpg/367px-Fish4283_-_Flickr_-_NOAA_Photo_Library.jpg</span>
<span class="floatright" style="height:288px; width:214;">https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/76/Fish4283_-_Flickr_-_NOAA_Photo_Library.jpg/367px-Fish4283_-_Flickr_-_NOAA_Photo_Library.jpg</span>
Floating Sargassum beds serve critical ecosystem functions to a variety of marine species.
Floating Sargassum beds serve critical ecosystem functions to a variety of marine species. These habitats contain a diverse assemblage of creatures including fish, sea turtles, and over 145 species of invertebrate, including sponges, fungi, bacteria, and protists. <ref name="pelagic">http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00227-014-2539-y</ref>
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===Ecological Roles===
===Ecological Roles===

Revision as of 17:43, 19 April 2016

Sargassum

sargassum.jpg

Introduction

Sargassum is a type of brown algae [1] which often serves as a Macroalgal Bed in oceans. Sargassum algae serves several benefits to marine life, providing food, refuge, and breeding grounds to much fishlife. Due to impacts of climate change, in recent years sargassum has grown at an uncontrollable rate and beginning to threaten reefs.

Habitats and Location of Sargassum

bermuda_sargasso.jpg Sargassum are generally found in “tidal splash zones, rocky marine pools, the intertidal zone, coral reefs and moderately deep coastal zone waters” [1]. Sargassum is found in throughout the Gulf of Mexico and North Atlantic [2]. Sargassum typically circulates in those regions and towards the Sargasso Sea in the North Atlantic Ocean, which is 1000 km wide and 3200 km long. [3]. Scientists estimate that the Sargasso sea contains up to 10 million metric tons of Sargassum [3]. In the spring and summer, the seaweed typically arrives on shores in the Gulf of Mexico, the southern U.S. Atlantic coast and the northern Caribbean, crowding beaches [2]. As the seaweed has become more dense and widespread it washes up on these beaches more frequently, and has even been found on the Western Coast of Europe [4] where it is invasive and non-native to these coastal areas.

Biology

Sargassum is a type of Brown Algae


Asexual Reproduction and by Meiosis Reproduces both sexually and via floating fragments. Fertilization usually takes place on the surfaces of the reproductive bodies (receptacles) and thousands of "germlings" are released.


There are over 2800 estimated species Main on is sargassum muticum


Relatively small, innocuous seaweed (1-2 m in length) can grow at up to 10 cm each day


Life-span of 3-4 years


The biological composition of sargassum has changed over time due to more sexual reproduction species are increasing variety is increasing a decline in pH, increase in summer temperatures, and changes in the abundance and distribution of Sargassum seaweed in the area might have contributed to these observations The variety is what allows it to keep growing

Ecology

367px-Fish4283_-_Flickr_-_NOAA_Photo_Library.jpg Floating Sargassum beds serve critical ecosystem functions to a variety of marine species. These habitats contain a diverse assemblage of creatures including fish, sea turtles, and over 145 species of invertebrate, including sponges, fungi, bacteria, and protists. [5]


Ecological Roles


Sargassum beds can form floating rafts that extend for miles across the ocean. The majority of sargassum is found in the Sargasso Sea, known as the "golden floating rainforest" because of its rich biodiversity. [3] These rafts provide habitats, food, and breeding grounds for a variety of marine organisms, and some creatures, like the Sargassum fish, live their entire lives in sargassum. [6]

Nurseries


Sargassum beds provide a nursery area for many commercially important fish species such as mahi mahi, jacks, and amberjacks.[6] Additionally, juvenile sea turtles often hide among the sargassum.[3]

Food


Sargassum rafts serve as feeding grounds for fish, seabirds, and other organisms.

Shelter


Environmental Impacts


Coral Reefs


Climate Change Effects


Human Influence


Notes

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