Seasonal Impacts on the Breakage of Nereocystis Leutkeana: A Break in Time
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Ahmed, Nadia
Dobkowski, Katie
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Abstract
Nereocystis luetkeana is an ecologically important species in the marine
environment and when it washes up as drift it becomes ecologically important to the
terrestrial environment, providing a crucial link between the two ecosystems. The first
appearance of N. luetkeana has been observed to be during early spring and then they
reach their full height in early summer and soon after become reproductive. During this
time, their chances of entanglement increase and so do their chances of detachment. Their
blades also contain a large amount of mass, and when the current causes those blades to
go in one direction, it causes tension in the stipe which in turn increases the risk of
detachment. This study focuses on quantifying the location of bull kelp failure (stipe,
holdfast, or substrate) throughout spring and seeing when the most breakage was
observed in the San Juan Archipelago. Significant patterns in the data were variable; two
locations found to have statistical significance in the average stipe length between early
and late spring showed opposite trends compared to each other. The variation in data
trends, and the observed variation in sizes and stages in the life cycle suggests that the
life cycle of N. luetkeana does not follow a certain seasonal schedule.
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Research in Marine Biology, Spring 2016
