• Title/Summary/Keyword: phaeophyte

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Macroalgal Flora of Maxwell Bay, King George Island, Antarctica: I. Chlorophyta, Chrysophyta and Phaeophyta

  • Kim, Ji-Hee;Chung, Ho-Sung;Oh, Yoon-Sik;Lee, In-Kyu
    • Ocean and Polar Research
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.209-221
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    • 2001
  • Taxonomic composition of marine benthic algal flora was investigated in an Antarctic bay. Specimens of chlorophyte, chrysophyte and phaeophyte were collected and examined over the period from January 1988 to January 1995 from Maxwell Bay, King George Island. A total of 19 genera and 23 species (7 chlorophytes, 1 chrysophyte and 15 phaeophytes) were identified and described. A chlorophyte Lambia antarctica (Skottsberg) Delepine and a phaeophyte Alethocladus corymbosus (Dickie) Sauvageau were recorded in Maxwell Bay for the first time. Taxonomic keys for the chlorophytes and the phaeophytes were also provided.

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Macroalgal Flora of Kongsfjorden in Svalbard Islands, the Arctic (북극 스발바드 군도 Kongsfjorden의 해조상)

  • Kim, Ji-Hee;Chung, Ho-Sung;Choi, Han-Gu;Kim, Yea-Dong
    • Ocean and Polar Research
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.569-591
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    • 2003
  • Marine benthic flora was investigated in an Arctic bay. Specimens of chlorophyte, phaeophyte, and rhodophyte were collected and examined over the period from July to August 2003 from Kongsfjorden Spitsbergen in Svalbard Islands. A total of 28 genera and 32 species (5 chlorophytes, 18 phaeophytes, and 9 rhodophytes) was identified and described. A green alga Enteromorpha linza(Linnaeus) J. Agardh, a brown alga Asperococcus compresus Griffiths ex Hooker, and three red algae Gracilaria gracilis (Stackhouse) Steentoft et al., Rhodymenia pacifica Kylin and Schizochlaenion rhodotrichum Wynne et Norris were recorded in Svalbard Islands for the first time.

A Harpacticoid Copepod Parasitic in the Cultivated Brown Alga Undaria pinnatifida in Korea

  • PARK Tai-Soo;RHO Yong-Gil;GONG Yong-Gun;LEE Dong-Yeub
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.23 no.6
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    • pp.439-442
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    • 1990
  • We have examined harpacticoid copepods inhabiting the phaeophyte Miyok, Undaria pinnatifida (Harvey), on the southern coast of Korea and cultured in the laboratory pieces of Miyok frond heavily infested by frond-mining nauplii to identify the harpacticoid copepod to which those nauplii belong. Of the harpacticoids found in Miyok-washings, only Amenophia orientalis Ho and Hong and an unidentified species of the genus Scutellidium occurred consistently in all Miyok samples examined. Many females of both species carried egg sacs. In the cultures the frond-mining nauplii developed, in 15 days at$15^{\circ}C$, into cope-podid stages or adults that were all identified with Amenephia orientalis. It is therefore concluded that this species is the causative agent for the so-called pinhole disease of the cultivated Miyok on the southern coast of Korea, which is diagnosed by the appearance on the thallus of numerous pinholes occupied by developing nauplii.

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Dietary Intake and Accumulation of Phlorotannins in Abalone after Feeding the Phaeophyte Ecklonia stolonifera (전복에서의 갈조류 곰피의 섭취 및 phlorotannin 축적)

  • Bangoura, Issa;Hong, Yong-Ki
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.25 no.7
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    • pp.780-785
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    • 2015
  • Dietary intake and bioavailability of phorotannins in abalone was investigated after feeding with the phlorotannin-rich brown seaweed Ecklonia stolonifera after 4 days starvation. Reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) affords isolation and quantification of the major phlorotannins of 7-phloroeckol and eckol, which were identified by mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance. Abalone growth and feed consumption rates were similar when fed either with the E. stolonifera or the common feed seaweed Saccharina japonica for 20 days. Throughout the feeding period, 7-phloroeckolol was accumulated in the abalone flesh tissue up to an average of 0.58±0.13 mg/g dry weight after 6 days. Eckol was reached to 0.25±0.05 mg/g dry tissue after 6 days, and maintained the level until end of feeding period. By feeding S. japonica as a control, no phlorotannins were detected in the abalone tissues. Both of the abalone, fed with E. stolonifera or S. japonica, had enzymes that decomposed 7-phloroeckol and eckol in muscle tissues, with similar degradation rates of −0.05 or less and −0.05 mg/ml/hr, respectively. Phlorotannins were reduced by constitutive enzymes in abalone tissues. Therefore, value-added abalone containing bioactive phlorotannins can be produced by simply changing the feed to the phlorotannin-rich brown seaweed E. stolonifera 6 days before harvest.