Nineteenth International Seaweed Symposium
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-9619-8_44
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Abundance of drifting seaweeds in eastern East China Sea

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Cited by 14 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, rafts from the Archipelago Sea are likely to disperse toward the Stockholm Archipelago year round but not vice versa. Overall, our model shows that floating Fucus can be transported far away from their source areas, such as reported previously for floating algae from Japan (Komatsu et al ) or Chile (Hinojosa et al ; Rothäusler et al ) among others.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…Furthermore, rafts from the Archipelago Sea are likely to disperse toward the Stockholm Archipelago year round but not vice versa. Overall, our model shows that floating Fucus can be transported far away from their source areas, such as reported previously for floating algae from Japan (Komatsu et al ) or Chile (Hinojosa et al ; Rothäusler et al ) among others.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…The temporal supply of floating algae can be variable, and is often related to the growth and reproductive season of their benthic form (Komatsu et al , 2014; Hinojosa et al ; Thiel et al ). For instance, floating individuals of many fucoids are observed during summer when algae shed most of their reproductive thalli during their main growth season (Komatsu et al ; Hinojosa et al ; Thiel et al ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Algal thalli can become detached from the bottom by the sheer drag force of waves and currents, and their positive buoyancy provided by the gas‐filled vesicles allow them to float to the water surface (Xu et al ). The floating biomass can maintain its vegetative state in the intertidal and subtidal zones, and some biomass may even reach offshore waters via surface currents (Komatsu et al ). In addition, research has shown S. horneri to expand its distribution from the coasts of East Asia to the American coasts, spreading along the coasts of southern California and down into Baja California, Mexico.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A geographic information system (GIS) is a viable solution and is defined as the ‘integration of computer hardware and software with spatially referenced digital data so that storage, retrieval, manipulation, analysis, and presentation of the data is possible in order to produce new spatially related output’ 18 . A brief literature review demonstrates that GIS has been used for very different purposes such as identifying the most productive zones for fisheries, 19 selecting artificial reef sites 20,21 or suitable conservation sites, 22,23 sea grass mapping, 24–27 sea weed mapping, 28,29 drifting sea weed distribution, 30,31 managing coastal natural resources in a sustainable way, 32–34 assessing pollution risk 35 or environmental impact, 36,37 explaining current dynamics, 38 evaluating the extent of a closure area 39 and even evaluating the costs and benefits of a planned policy 40,41 …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%