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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: seaweed

A new seaweed

15 Tuesday Oct 2024

Posted by sconzani in seaweed

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Ascophyllum nodosum, Bristol Channel, British seaweeds, Knotted wrack, Severn Estuary

Although I live in a coastal town, it’s not exactly a seaside town, as the waterway immediately offshore is officially part of the Severn Estuary, which becomes the Bristol Channel just a mile or so downstream. However, the Severn Estuary is still home to at least 100 different species of seaweed and, during a recent walk, I found a couple of species I hadn’t noticed before.

241015 knotted wrack (1)

This one is, I think, Knotted wrack (Ascophyllum nodosum). It certainly fits the description on the Marine Conservation Society website: ‘Knotted wrack has narrow, strap-like fronds with large single air bladders’, and looks like their photo. (The reason I sound hesitant is because I found a very similar photo on another website which was labelled Channel wrack).

241015 knotted wrack (2)

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The original source of iodine

02 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by sconzani in nature, nature photography, plants, seaweed

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bladder wrack, kelp, seashore plant, seaside

For the first time this year I’ve been to the seaside – not a long sandy beach, but the boulder-strewn former harbour entrance at the bottom of the crumbling cliffs of Penarth Head where many rocks on the lower half of the shore have bladder wrack growing on them. Fucus vesiculosus is probably the most common seaweed to be found on British shores, and grows on the coasts of most of the oceans and seas in the northern hemisphere.

160202 bladderwrack (1)

As its common name implies, this member of the kelp family uses air bladders for buoyancy, to help float its fronds upwards towards the light. When growing in an area with more violent wave action, it grows less bladders as the wave movement helps elevate its fronds instead. It is intolerant of drying out, so its fronds flop together in a moist heap which helps keep water loss to a minimum between tides.

160202 bladderwrack (2)

Though herbalists have used bladder wrack for centuries to stimulate thyroid function, and for the treatment of rheumatism and some skin diseases, it was only in 1819 that J. F. Coindet validated its efficacy scientifically, when he discovered that bladder wrack contained iodine. Extracts were subsequently used in medicines to treat goitre and other thyroid diseases.

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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