Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station

Fronds of the Antarctic seaweeds, Phyllophora antarctica and Phycodrys antarctica fronds, attached to sea urchins (Sterechinus neumayeri) caught with a bait-trap, were collected from ice-covered shore of Kita-no-seto Strait near Syowa Station during the 1982 summer. For about three months, Phyll. an...

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Main Authors: Masao Ohno, Yoshitaka Kondo, Teruo Tobayama, Shigeru Sakakibara, Takao Hoshiai
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: National Institute of Polar Research 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15094/00009084
https://doaj.org/article/b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2
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author Masao Ohno
Yoshitaka Kondo
Teruo Tobayama
Shigeru Sakakibara
Takao Hoshiai
author_facet Masao Ohno
Yoshitaka Kondo
Teruo Tobayama
Shigeru Sakakibara
Takao Hoshiai
author_sort Masao Ohno
collection Unknown
description Fronds of the Antarctic seaweeds, Phyllophora antarctica and Phycodrys antarctica fronds, attached to sea urchins (Sterechinus neumayeri) caught with a bait-trap, were collected from ice-covered shore of Kita-no-seto Strait near Syowa Station during the 1982 summer. For about three months, Phyll. antarctica fronds were maintained at approximately 0℃ in the refrigerator of the icebreaker FUJI. After April 1982,they were maintained in a glass culture tank at Kamogawa Sea World, Chiba, Japan. Aerated seawater was supplied through a closed re-circulation system; water temperature was kept between -1.9 and 1.5℃ The tank was illuminated with a 10W day-light fluorescent tube (12h light, 12h dark). Phyll. antarctica survived in the tank for 16 years. Producing new growth at the margin of the original fronds, the old parts decayed. Consequently the biomass of fronds increased 20-30 times. It was noted that the biomass increase was greater with the cohabitation of such animals as fish, echinoids, asteroids, gastropods and nemertineans than that when the seaweeds were maintained without animals. In the 1985 summer, fronds of the same Phyll. antarctica were again collected by the same method. The fronds were taken to the Usa Marine Biological Institute, Kochi University, Japan. Those fronds were cultivated in 200ml of enriched seawater with SWII medium in dishes (500ml). The fronds were kept in an incubator 5℃ in fluorescent light ranging from 5-50μE・(cm)^・s^(12L/12D). The fronds survived for 3 years under the lower light conditions, but their growth was lower and their size was smaller than the fronds cultured in Kamogawa Sea World. Newly collected fronds were also maintained in dark conditions at 0-5℃ The fronds survived well for one year but then died after de-colarization of fronds after 3 years. We concluded that the survival of Phyll. antarctica was better at 0℃ than at 5℃
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Syowa Station
Kita-no-seto
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Syowa Station
Kita-no-seto
id fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2
institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(39.583,39.583,-69.000,-69.000)
op_collection_id fttriple
op_doi https://doi.org/10.15094/00009084
op_relation doi:10.15094/00009084
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https://doaj.org/article/b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2
op_rights undefined
op_source Antarctic Record, Vol 43, Iss 2, Pp 354-360 (1999)
publishDate 1999
publisher National Institute of Polar Research
record_format openpolar
spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2 2025-01-16T19:27:28+00:00 Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station Masao Ohno Yoshitaka Kondo Teruo Tobayama Shigeru Sakakibara Takao Hoshiai 1999-07-01 https://doi.org/10.15094/00009084 https://doaj.org/article/b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2 en other eng National Institute of Polar Research doi:10.15094/00009084 0085-7289 2432-079X https://doaj.org/article/b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2 undefined Antarctic Record, Vol 43, Iss 2, Pp 354-360 (1999) geo Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 1999 fttriple https://doi.org/10.15094/00009084 2023-01-22T17:53:01Z Fronds of the Antarctic seaweeds, Phyllophora antarctica and Phycodrys antarctica fronds, attached to sea urchins (Sterechinus neumayeri) caught with a bait-trap, were collected from ice-covered shore of Kita-no-seto Strait near Syowa Station during the 1982 summer. For about three months, Phyll. antarctica fronds were maintained at approximately 0℃ in the refrigerator of the icebreaker FUJI. After April 1982,they were maintained in a glass culture tank at Kamogawa Sea World, Chiba, Japan. Aerated seawater was supplied through a closed re-circulation system; water temperature was kept between -1.9 and 1.5℃ The tank was illuminated with a 10W day-light fluorescent tube (12h light, 12h dark). Phyll. antarctica survived in the tank for 16 years. Producing new growth at the margin of the original fronds, the old parts decayed. Consequently the biomass of fronds increased 20-30 times. It was noted that the biomass increase was greater with the cohabitation of such animals as fish, echinoids, asteroids, gastropods and nemertineans than that when the seaweeds were maintained without animals. In the 1985 summer, fronds of the same Phyll. antarctica were again collected by the same method. The fronds were taken to the Usa Marine Biological Institute, Kochi University, Japan. Those fronds were cultivated in 200ml of enriched seawater with SWII medium in dishes (500ml). The fronds were kept in an incubator 5℃ in fluorescent light ranging from 5-50μE・(cm)^・s^(12L/12D). The fronds survived for 3 years under the lower light conditions, but their growth was lower and their size was smaller than the fronds cultured in Kamogawa Sea World. Newly collected fronds were also maintained in dark conditions at 0-5℃ The fronds survived well for one year but then died after de-colarization of fronds after 3 years. We concluded that the survival of Phyll. antarctica was better at 0℃ than at 5℃ Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Unknown Antarctic The Antarctic Syowa Station Kita-no-seto ENVELOPE(39.583,39.583,-69.000,-69.000)
spellingShingle geo
Masao Ohno
Yoshitaka Kondo
Teruo Tobayama
Shigeru Sakakibara
Takao Hoshiai
Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station
title Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station
title_full Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station
title_fullStr Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station
title_full_unstemmed Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station
title_short Long-term culture of Antarctic seaweed, Phyllophora antarctica (Rhodophyta), sampled at Syowa Station
title_sort long-term culture of antarctic seaweed, phyllophora antarctica (rhodophyta), sampled at syowa station
topic geo
topic_facet geo
url https://doi.org/10.15094/00009084
https://doaj.org/article/b9a1e7b90b0d4b11962d4f972c1c6fa2