Sea lettuce
Sea lettuce | |
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Ulva lactuca Illustration from Sowerby's English botany 1790-1814, by James Sowerby | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukarya |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Phylum: | Chlorophyta |
Class: | Ulvophyceae |
Order: | Ulvales |
Family: | Ulvaceae |
Genus: | Ulva Linnaeus, 1753 |
Species | |
See text | |
Synonyms[1] | |
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The sea lettuces comprise the genus Ulva, a group of edible green algae that is widely distributed along the coasts of the world's oceans. The type species within the genus Ulva is Ulva lactuca, lactuca being Latin for "lettuce". The genus also includes the species previously classified under the genus Enteromorpha,[1] the former members of which are known under the common name green nori.[2]
Description
Individual blades of Ulva can grow to be more than 400mm (16") in size, but this only occurs when the plants are growing in sheltered areas. A macroscopic alga light to dark green in colour, attached by disc holdfast.[3]
Nutrition
Sea lettuce is eaten by a number of different sea animals, including manatees and the sea slugs known as sea hares. Many species of sea lettuce are a food source for humans in Scandinavia, Great Britain, Ireland, China, and Japan (where this food is known as aosa). Sea lettuce as a food for humans is eaten raw in salads and cooked in soups. It is high in protein, soluble dietary fiber, and a variety of vitamins and minerals, especially iron.
Aquarium Trade
Sea lettuce species are commonly found in the saltwater aquarium trade, where the plants are valued for their high nutrient uptake and edibility. Many reef aquarium keepers use sea lettuce species in refugiums or grow it as a food source for herbivorous fish. Sea lettuce is very easy to keep, tolerating a wide range of lighting and temperature conditions. In the refugium, sea lettuce can be attached to live rock or another surface, or simply left to drift in the water.
Health concerns
In August 2009, unprecedented amounts of these algae washed up on the beaches of Brittany, France, causing a major public health scare as it decomposed. The rotting leaves produced large quantities of hydrogen sulfide, a toxic gas. In one incident near Saint-Michel-en-Grève, a horse rider lost consciousness and his horse died after breathing the seaweed fumes; in another, a lorry driver driving a load of decomposing sea lettuce passed out, crashed and died, with toxic fumes claimed to be the cause.[4] Environmentalists blamed the phenomenon on excessive nitrates washed out to sea from improper disposal of pig and poultry animal waste from industrial farms.
Species
Species in the genus Ulva include the following:[5]
- Accepted species
- Ulva acanthophora (Kützing) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva anandii Amjad & Shameel, 1993
- Ulva arasakii Chihara, 1969
- Ulva atroviridis Levring, 1938
- Ulva beytensis Thivy & Sharma, 1966
- Ulva bifrons Ardré, 1967
- Ulva brevistipita V.J. Chapman, 1956
- Ulva burmanica (Zeller) De Toni, 1889
- Ulva californica Wille, 1899
- Ulva chaetomorphoides (Børgesen) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva clathrata (Roth) C. Agardh, 1811
- Ulva compressa Linnaeus, 1753
- Ulva conglobata Kjellman, 1897
- Ulva cornuta Lightfoot, 1777
- Ulva covelongensis V. Krishnamurthy & H. Joshi, 1969
- Ulva crassa V.J. Chapman, 1956
- Ulva crassimembrana (V.J. Chapman) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva curvata (Kützing) De Toni, 1889
- Ulva denticulata P.J.L. Dangeard, 1959
- Ulva diaphana Hudson, 1778
- Ulva elegans Gayral, 1960
- Ulva enteromorpha Le Jolis, 1863
- Ulva erecta (Lyngbye) Fries
- Ulva expansa (Setchell) Setchell & N.L. Gardner, 1920
- Ulva fasciata Delile, 1813
- Ulva flexuosa Wulfen, 1803
- Ulva geminoidea V.J. Chapman, 1956
- Ulva gigantea (Kützing) Bliding, 1969
- Ulva grandis Saifullah & Nizamuddin, 1977
- Ulva hookeriana (Kützing) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland
- Ulva hopkirkii (M'Calla ex Harvey) P. Crouan & H. Crouan
- Ulva howensis (A.H.S. Lucas) Kraft, 2007
- Ulva indica Roth, 1806
- Ulva intestinalis Linnaeus, 1753
- Ulva intestinaloides (R.P.T. Koeman & Hoek) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva javanica N.L. Burman, 1768
- Ulva kylinii (Bliding) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva lactuca Linnaeus, 1753
- Ulva laetevirens J.E. Areschoug, 1854
- Ulva laingii V.J. Chapman, 1956
- Ulva linearis P.J.L. Dangeard, 1957
- Ulva linza Linnaeus, 1753
- Ulva lippii Lamouroux
- Ulva litoralis Suhr ex Kützing
- Ulva littorea Suhr
- Ulva lobata (Kützing) Harvey, 1855
- Ulva marginata (J. Agardh) Le Jolis
- Ulva micrococca (Kützing) Gobi
- Ulva neapolitana Bliding, 1960
- Ulva nematoidea Bory de Saint-Vincent, 1828
- Ulva ohnoi Hiraoka & Shimada, 2004
- Ulva olivascens P.J.L. Dangeard
- Ulva pacifica Endlicher
- Ulva papenfussii Pham-Hoang Hô, 1969
- Ulva parva V.J. Chapman, 1956
- Ulva paschima Bast
- Ulva patengensis Salam & Khan, 1981
- Ulva percursa (C. Agardh) C. Agardh
- Ulva pertusa Kjellman, 1897
- Ulva phyllosa (V.J. Chapman) Papenfuss
- Ulva polyclada Kraft, 2007
- Ulva popenguinensis P.J.L. Dangeard, 1958
- Ulva porrifolia (S.G. Gmelin) J.F. Gmelin
- Ulva profunda W.R. Taylor, 1928
- Ulva prolifera O.F.Müller, 1778
- Ulva pseudocurvata Koeman & Hoek, 1981
- Ulva pseudolinza (R.P.T. Koeman & Hoek) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva pulchra Jaasund, 1976
- Ulva quilonensis Sindhu & Panikkar, 1995
- Ulva radiata (J. Agardh) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva ralfsii (Harvey) Le Jolis, 1863
- Ulva ranunculata Kraft & A.J.K. Millar, 2000
- Ulva reticulata Forsskål, 1775
- Ulva rhacodes (Holmes) Papenfuss, 1960
- Ulva rigida C. Agardh, 1823
- Ulva rotundata Bliding, 1968
- Ulva saifullahii Amjad & Shameel, 1993
- Ulva serrata A.P.de Candolle
- Ulva simplex (K.L. Vinogradova) Hayden, Blomster, Maggs, P.C. Silva, M.J. Stanhope & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva sorensenii V.J. Chapman, 1956
- Ulva spinulosa Okamura & Segawa, 1936
- Ulva stenophylla Setchell & N.L. Gardner, 1920
- Ulva sublittoralis Segawa, 1938
- Ulva subulata (Wulfen) Naccari
- Ulva taeniata (Setchell) Setchell & N.L. Gardner, 1920
- Ulva tanneri H.S. Hayden & J.R. Waaland, 2003
- Ulva tenera Kornmann & Sahling
- Ulva torta (Mertens) Trevisan, 1841
- Ulva tuberosa Palisot de Beauvois
- Ulva uncialis (Kützing) Montagne, 1850
- Ulva uncinata Mohr
- Ulva uncinata Mertens
- Ulva usneoides Bonnemaison
- Ulva utricularis (Roth) C. Agardh
- Ulva utriculosa C. Agardh
- Ulva uvoides Bory de Saint-Vincent
- Ulva ventricosa A.P.de Candolle
- Ulva costata Wollny, 1881
- Ulva repens Clemente, 1807
- Ulva tetragona A.P.de Candolle, 1807
A newly discovered Indian endemic species of Ulva with tubular thallus indistinguishable from Ulva intestinalis has been formally established in 2014 as Ulva paschima Bast.[6]
See also
References
- 1 2 Hillary S. Hayden, Jaanika Blomster, Christine A. Maggs, Paul C. Silva, Michael J. Stanhope, & J. Robert Waaland (2003). "Linnaeus was right all along: Ulva and Enteromorpha are not distinct genera" (PDF). European Journal of Phycology (British Phycological Society) 38: 277–294. doi:10.1080/1364253031000136321. ISSN 1469-4433.
- ↑ M.D. Guiry & G.M. Guiry (2012). "Enteromorpha Link in Nees, 1820". AlgaeBase. National University of Ireland. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
- ↑ Burrows, E.M. 1991. Seaweeds of the British Isles. Volume 2 Chlorophyta. Natural History Museum, ISBN 0-565-00981-8
- ↑ "Seaweed suspected in French death". BBC. September 7, 2009. Retrieved September 7, 2009.
- ↑ M.D. Guiry (2012). M. D. Guiry & G. M. Guiry, ed. "Ulva Linnaeus, 1753". AlgaeBase. National University of Ireland, Galway. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
- ↑ BAST, F., JOHN, A.A. AND BHUSHAN, S. 2014. Strong endemism of bloom-forming tubular Ulva in Indian west coast, with description of Ulva paschima Sp. Nov. (Ulvales, Chlorophyta. PLoS ONE 9(10): e109295. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0109295
External links
- Marine botany: Ulva
- C. Tanner & Robert Wilkes (2005-02-17). "Ulva Linnaeus 1753: 1163". AlgaeBase.
- Toxic seaweed clogs French coast (BBC)
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