If you find a white seaweed, it is probably a red algae that has been bleached by the sun. A seaweed that feels crisp is a species that is calcified (lime-coated).
Click on each image for a larger view.
Green algae |
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Sea Lettuce Ulva lactuca
This is a worldwide species of green alga. It is seen here just south of Mudurup Rocks forming a bright green band along the rocky shore. The lamina or “leaves” are only two cells thick. It is sometimes used as a food. |
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Velvet Golf Ball Codium mamillosum
Like all species of the genus Codium, this spherical one has a velvety surface made up of tiny tubes, which are the swollen ends of the entwined filaments that make up the interior of the plant.
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Dead Man’s Fingers Codium galeatum
This aptly-named alga regularly branches into two and can grow up to a metre long. All species of Codium have a similar spongy or velvety surface although their overall shape differs greatly.
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Velvet Sponge Weed Codium spongeosum
The various species of Codium have very different shapes but all have the same spongy or velvety outer surface. Each plant is composed of entwined filaments, without cross-walls, so that a Codium plant is essentially an enormous single cell. |
Red algae |
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Red algae Rhodophyta
There are many species of red algae growing along our coast. Many are small plants forming the “algal turf” on the reef platforms. Their red pigment is able to trap filtered light under the water and use it for photosynthesis. Some are calcified – they have a lime-coated surface and feel crisp. Stranded red algae are often bleached white by the sun. |
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Slimy Bags Gloiosaccion brownii
Despite their varying colours, these are red algae. Their Latin generic name means “glue sack” meaning that they are filled with mucilage. The function of this glue is not well understood. |
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Jelly Weed Betaphycus speciosum (formerly Eucheuma)
In colonial days women collected this red alga to make jelly and blancmange as they had done with Irish Moss in Britain. It contains the gelling compounds agar and carrageenan. It is a thick, tough plant with short, spiny branches. |
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Epiphytic Algae
These red algae are growing as epiphytes on the stem of the wireweed Amphibolis. Many algae, as well as animals such as hydroids and barnacles, grow attached to seagrasses without being parasitic – it is simply a base or substratum for them to hold onto. |
Brown Algae |
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Sargasso Weed Sargassum sp.
The many species of Sargassum have little ball-like floats. They have a holdfast (like roots), a stipe (like a stem) and laminae (like leaves). However these are not true roots, stems and leaves because algae do not pump water up from the roots to the leaves as the vascular land plants do – they simply absorb nutrients directly from the water. |
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Warty Weed Scaberia agardhii
The wiry stems of this brown alga are crowded with stumpy branches and floats, giving it a warty appearance. It grows in water up to 40m deep. |
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Common Kelp Ecklonia radiata
The kelps are large, tough, leathery brown algae. Common kelp can grow up to two metres high, attached to the reef by a holdfast. It has a tough, cylindrical stipe and spiny, corrugated laminae. It grows commonly on limestone reefs, down to depths of 40 metres, and is often the dominant feature of the underwater landscape on rough-water coasts. |
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Common Kelp - holdfast Ecklonia radiata
This is the holdfast of the common kelp Ecklonia radiata described above. Seaweeds, or algae, do not have true roots because they absorb all their nutrients directly from the water. The holdfast is merely to hold it to the rock in rough seas. This one, however, came away with the piece of rock or coral that is was attached to.
This picture of Asher McCarthy was a winner in our 2007 Flotsam photo competition. |
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Oyster Thief Colpomenia sinuosa
This is a brown seaweed shaped like a hollow cushion. It is normally fixed to a substratum such as a rock or the shell of a mollusc. Oxygen from photosynthesis fills the hollow and gives it buoyancy. Its common name arose in the oyster industry, when large individuals of this species floated to the surface carrying their attached substratum with them! |
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Ornate Turbinaria Turbinaria gracilis
This is a tough, gristle-like brown seaweed with characteristic “crowns”. |
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