Neha Patil (Editor)

Codium fragile

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Order
  
Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Codium

Division
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Codium fragile

Rank
  
Species

Codium fragile Seaweedie Codium fragile

Similar
  
Codium, Tresus keenae, Green algae, Bryopsidales, Sargassum muticum

codium fragile


Codium fragile, known commonly as green sea fingers, dead man's fingers, felty fingers, forked felt-alga, stag seaweed, sponge seaweed, green sponge, green fleece, and oyster thief, is a species of seaweed in the family Codiaceae. It originates in the Pacific Ocean near Japan and has become an invasive species on the coasts of the Northern Atlantic Ocean.

Contents

Codium fragile Codium fragile Suringar Hariot Algaebase

This siphonous green alga is dark green in color. It appears as a fuzzy patch of tubular fingers. These formations hang down from rocks during low tide, hence the nickname "dead man's fingers". The "fingers" are branches up to a centimeter wide and sometimes over 30 centimeters long.

Codium fragile Codium fragile Suringar Hariot Algaebase

Codium fragile occurs in the low intertidal zone, and subtidal on high-energy beaches.

It has no asexual (sporophyte) stage, and male and female gametes are both produced on separate plants.

Subspecies

Subspecies of C. fragile can only be distinguished microscopically.

Codium fragile subsp. atlanticum

Codium fragile Codium fragile Biopix photoimage 95107

Codium fragile subsp. atlanticum is known to have arrived in the southwest of Ireland around 1808. From there it may have spread by rafting or floating in the sea. Approximately 30 years later, it was found in Scotland. It is thought to have originally come from the Pacific Ocean near Japan.

Codium fragile Codium fragile subsp fragile Suringar Hariot Algaebase

Since 1840, when it was first discovered in Scotland, it has spread the entire length of Britain, including Shetland. Between 1949 and 1955 it is known to have spread between Berwick-upon-Tweed and St. Andrews, Fife, a distance of 80 km. Populations of this algae occur mostly in northern Britain. Elsewhere in Europe, it is found only in Norway.

This species displaces the native Codium tomentosum.

Codium fragile subsp. atlanticum is used as food in the Far East.

Codium fragile subsp. tomentosoides

Codium fragile Codium fragile subsp tomentosoides van Goor PCSilva Algaebase

The subspecies Codium fragile subsp. tomentosoides (syn. Codium mucronatum var. tomentosoides), occurs along nearly the whole coastline of the eastern United States, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada to North Carolina. It is a rapidly spreading invasive species. It originated in the Pacific Ocean around Japan, and was introduced into New York from Europe in 1957. Its presence was first recorded in 1964 in the Gulf of Maine at Boothbay.

Codium fragile httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

This is a dominant subspecies in the subtidal zone, attaching to almost any hard surface. This results in increased maintenance labor for aquaculturists and reduces the productivity of cultured marine life. In established shellfish beds, this species can become a nuisance; it may attach to shellfish and then float away, carrying the animals with it. This was the inspiration for the common name "oyster thief".

Codium fragile subsp. scandinavicum

This subspecies was introduced from Asiatic coasts of the Pacific to Norway, and to Denmark in 1919.

References

Codium fragile Wikipedia