Invasion History

First Non-native North American Tidal Record: 2003
First Non-native West Coast Tidal Record: 2003
First Non-native East/Gulf Coast Tidal Record:

General Invasion History:

Sargassum horneri has a broad native range in the Northwest Pacific, from Hokkaido, Japan to the Philippines (Hu et al. 2011, Guiry and Guiry 2016). It grows mostly in subtidal waters of 3-15 m, but can grow intertidally and can form large floating mats in the seas off Japan, China and Korea (Abe et al. 2013; Gao and Hua 1997; Yoshida et al. 2004). In 2003, it was first identified in Los Angeles Harbor, California and has expanded its range north to the northern Channel Islands and south to Isla Natividad, Baja California (Miller et al. 2007; Riosmena-Rodríguez et al. 2012; Marks et al. 2015; Kaplanis et al. 2016).

North American Invasion History:

Invasion History on the West Coast:

Sargassum horneri was first noted in Los Angeles Harbor in October 2003, and was found to have spread from the inner harbor to the channel by October 2005. In 2006, it was collected on Santa Catalina Island (Miller et al. 2007). Its range on the southern California coast has expanded rapidly, reaching Redondo Beach by 2004, Point Loma, San Diego by 2006 (Marks et al. 2015), and Todos Santos Bay, Baja California by 2005 (Aguilar-Rosas et al. 2007). By 2009, S. horneri had reached Anacapa and Santa Cruz Islands, in the northern Channel Islands (Marks et al. 2015) and Isla Natividad, Baja California, Mexico (Riosmena-Rodríguez et al. 2012). Many of the harbors of coastal southern California, from Port Hueneme (California Department of Fish and Wildlife 2014) to San Diego Bay were colonized by 2013 (Marks et al. 2015). Its range now covers 950 km on the California and Mexico coastline (Kaplanis et al. 2016). It has been reported from Guadalupe Island, 241 km off of Baja California (Bushing 2014). Almost all of the occurrences of S. horneri have been subtidal, with greatest abundance at 3-5 m (Marks 2015), but a few plants have been found in the lower intertidal (Anonymous 2009). Sargassum horneri was probably transported to Los Angeles by fouling or ballast water, while recreational boats are probably responsible for the subsequent spread to smaller harbors (Miller et al. 2007; Marks et al. 2015; Kaplanis et al. 2016).


Description

Sargassum horneri usually grows erect, attached by a solid holdfast, but can also form free-floating mats. Young plants resemble ferns, with opposite leaf-like blades, extending from a central axis. The blades have broad, deeply incised, ragged tips. As the plant grows, it becomes a single frond, loosely branched, in a zigzag pattern. Once it matures, the blades become narrower and the branches develop small, ellipsoidal air bladders and larger spindle-shaped reproductive receptacles, both on stalks. The airbladders keep the seaweeds upright in the water column. Plants in California range between 0.3-1.5 m tall (Miller et al. 2007; Uwai et al. 2009; Marks 2015; Marks et al. 2015). At some locations in Japan, plants can reach 2.5-5 in height (Yoshida et al. 2004).

The taxonomy of Sargassum horneri has been complicated by morphological, life-history, and genetic differences among populations. Specimens with spherical to elliptical reproductive receptacles were known as S. filicinum, while those with spindle-shaped receptacles were classified as S. horneri. Genetic studies have indicated that these forms are conspecific (Uwai et al. 2009), but that Asian populations consist of five clades, one of which is confined to Chinese coastal seas, while the other four are broadly distributed through the southwest Pacific. Oceanic drifting of large rafts of these seaweeds facilitates genetic exchange (Hu et al. 2011).


Taxonomy

Taxonomic Tree

Kingdom:   Plantae
Phylum:   Phaeophycophyta
Class:   Phaeophyceae
Order:   Fucales
Family:   Sargassaceae
Genus:   Sargassum
Species:   horneri

Synonyms

Sargassum fengeri (J. Agardh, 1889)
Sargassum filicinum (Harvey, 1860)

Potentially Misidentified Species

Sargassum muticum
Sargassum muticum has a bushy form and can have multiple stems. Blades are oval and smooth, or toothed. Air bladders are spherical or oval, and receptacles are club-shaped. Plants can reach up to 10 m long, but are more usually 1-2 m (Scagel 1956; Cohen 2005).

Ecology

General:

Mature Sargassum horneri plants produce receptacles, specialized structures for the production of gametes. Populations of Japanese plants varied in their seasonality, producing receptacles in fall, winter or spring, but matured at an average of 150 to 250 mm length (Yoshida et al. 2004). Most populations of S. horneri are dioecious (Umezaki 1984; Choi et al. 2008), but introduced populations in the Eastern Pacific are monecious and are capable of self-fertilization (Marks 2015). Eggs are fertilized in the receptacles and are released into the water. An average plant 100 cm long discharges about 3 million eggs (Umezaki 1984). The fertilized zygotes, when settled on a suitable surface, develop rhizoids, at about 1 mm diameter (Ogawa 1986; Uchida 1993; Choi et al. 2008). Early germlings develop fernlike fronds. As the plant grows beyond 20-30 mm diameter, it develops branches, and smaller, ragged-tipped blades (Uchida 1993).

Sargassum horneri grows over a wide latitudinal range, from cold-temperate to tropical conditions. This species shows a high degree of regional and local genetic diversity, which may, in part, account for its wide geographical and ecological range (Yoshida et al. 2004; Hu et al. 2011). Germlings from Korea grew well at 15-25°C, while adults had a smaller range of 10-15°C (Choi et al. 2008). Growth rates of germlings were not greatly affected by light intensity and grew about equally well at short (8h Light), long (16h L), and 24 h L photoperiods, while adult plants grew best at long photoperiods, and badly at 24 h, corresponding with the reproductive season of this population (Choi et al. 2008). Germlings grew at 23 to 42 PSU, with an optimum of 32 PSU (Ogawa 1986). Developmental rate and outcome vary with photoperiod. Plants kept under short-day conditions grew to ~140 cm in 100 days and then developed receptacles 27-45 days after transfer to long-day conditions. Dioecious plants with either male or female receptacles were about 1500 to 2500 mm long (Uchida 1993). Shoots became elongated under short-day conditions, while receptacles formed under long-day photoperiods, or when plants were transferred from short-day to long-day photoperiods (Uchida 1993). After the release of gametes, growth ceases, and the plants senesce and disintegrate. As this happens, germlings and juvenile plants appear (Gao and Hua 1997). Even within a single bay (Hiroshima Bay), S. horneri, showed a great diversity of seasonality and growth patterns. Different populations released gametes in autumn, winter, and spring. Growth was affected somewhat by differences in sedimentation, but transplants showed that most of the differences between populations were genetic (Yoshida et al. 2004).

To our knowledge, this seaweed has not been reported in estuarine salinities. Sargassum horneri is commonly known from rocky habitats (Yoshida et al. 2004). In southern California harbors, it is abundant on riprap walls within harbors, but rare on exposed jetties outside harbors, or on exposed coastlines. It is primarily known from shallow subtidal depths (1-5 m) (Kaplanis et al. 2016), but is also found in the lower rocky intertidal in Baja California, and at Laguna Beach, California. The extent to which it uses man-made structures is unclear, but it has been found on a seawater intake pipe (Miller et al. 2007) and on fouling panels (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 1952). In its native range, S. horneri, in addition to being part of the coastal flora, also has a major role in the open sea, where it can form floating mats. These were small compared to the Atlantic Sargasso Sea mats of S. natans, weighing 11 kg wet weight, or less, but constitute an important habitat for invertebrates and juvenile fishes in the East China Sea (Abe et al. 2013, Komatsu 2014). Along the West Coast of North America, the ability of S. horneri to survive for long periods of time (4-14 weeks) after being detached has contributed to its rapid dispersal, but extensive algal mats have not yet been reported. Growth experiments sugges that temperatures above ;25 ° C, or below 10 ° C will slow, but not stop the northward and southward spread of S. horneri.(Small and Edwards 2021).

Trophic Status:

Primary Producer

PrimProd

Habitats

General HabitatRockyNone
Salinity RangePolyhaline18-30 PSU
Salinity RangeEuhaline30-40 PSU
Tidal RangeSubtidalNone
Tidal RangeLow IntertidalNone
Vertical HabitatEpibenthicNone

Life History


Tolerances and Life History Parameters

Minimum Temperature (ºC)10Lab, plants from Korea (Choi et al. 2008)
Maximum Temperature (ºC)28.5Field, Maizuru Bay, Japan (Gao and Hua 1997).
Minimum Reproductive Temperature10Lab, for rhizoid formation in germlings (Ogawa 1986)
Maximum Reproductive Temperature20Lab, for rhizoid formation in germlings. 15 C is ptimum (Ogawa 1986)
Minimum Reproductive Salinity22.7Lab, for rhizoid formation in germlings (Ogawa 1986)
Maximum Reproductive Salinity42Lab, for rhizoid formation in germlings (Ogawa 1986). The optimum is 32 PSU.
Minimum Length (mm)1,500Approximate minimum size for receptacle formation, in a Japanese coastal population. A more frequent size was ~250 mm (Yoshida et al. 2004)/
Maximum Length (mm)5,000Korea, Choi et al. 2008
Broad Temperature RangeNoneWarm temperate-Tropical
Broad Salinity RangeNonePolyhaline-Euhaline

General Impacts

Sargassum horneri is a large conspicuous seaweed, with no reported economic or ecological impacts. However, it has the potential to be major habitat engineer because of its rapid growth and large size. Limited information on its impacts in California and Mexico are based on qualitative observations by divers (Bushing 2014). Experimental studies have not yet been published, to our knowledge. In the winter of 2015, off Catalina Island, divers carried out hand and mechanical removal, extracting about 9,000 pounds of the alga from nearly one square kilometer. Some of those assisting with the removal tried making beer and soap with Sargassum in hopes of increasing awareness and potentially finding a commercial appetite for it (NOAA 2015). In Japan, boiled S. horneri, known as 'Akamoku', is consumed locally, but has also been studied for wider commercial marketing (Shinohara et al. 2009).


Regional Impacts

P058_CDA_P058 (San Pedro Channel Islands)Ecological ImpactCompetition
Observations by divers off Catalina Island indicate that Sargassum horneri may be displacing native seaweeds, and even Giant Kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera). The quick-growing S. horneri may shade out germlings of native seaweeds. This invasion took place during periods of warmer water temperatures, but halted during the cooler winter of 2010-2011 (Bushing 2014). Removal of S. horneri from plots resulted increased Kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), but no change in overall ner community production (Sulloway and Edwards 2020).
P058_CDA_P058 (San Pedro Channel Islands)Ecological ImpactHabitat Change
Dense growths of Sargassum horneri may inhibit the movement and feeding of fishes and Spiny Lobsters (Panulirus interruptus sp). However, senescent plants, like S. horneri, are covered with other algae and invertebrates, which are food for fishes and invertebrates (Bushing 2014).
P058_CDA_P058 (San Pedro Channel Islands)Ecological ImpactFood/Prey
Sargassum horneri produces toxins which inhibit feeding by native herbivores (Bushing 2014).
P058_CDA_P058 (San Pedro Channel Islands)Economic ImpactAesthetic
Dense growths, decaying fragments, and gametes of Sargassum horneri limit visibility and enjoyment of SCUBA divers (Bushing 2014). Experimental removal of S. horneri was attempted off Santa Catalina Island. Cleeared areas were re-colonized with higher densities of the seaweed, probably due to an unusaul imflux of warm water. Removal will probably be most effective in periods of cooler water, and when targeted to new intorduction sites and sites of biological importance (Marks et al. 2017).
NEP-VIPt. Conception to Southern Baja CaliforniaEcological ImpactCompetition

Observations by divers off Catalina Island indicate that Sargassum horneri may be displacing native seaweeds, and even Giant Kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera). The quick-growing S. horneri may shade out germlings of native seaweeds. This invasion took place during periods of warmer water temperatures, but halted during the cooler winter of 2010-2011 (Bushing 2014). In 3 marine protected areas (MPAs) on the coast of Anancapa Island, algal communities resisted the invasion of S. horneri in the oldest MPAs, with more intact kelp forest, but S. horneri was more successful in newest MPAs, and unprotected areas, with more disturbance by recent fishing for sea urchins, and spiny lobsters and California Sheepshead fish (Semicossyphus pulcher), both urchin predators. Fishing for urchin predators reduced overall grazing, favoring competition by native algae (Caselle et al. 2017). Removal of S. horneri from plots resulted increased Kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), but no change in overall ner community production (Sulloway and Edwards 2020). Off Todos Santos Islands, Baja California, Mexico. a marine heatwave favored the partial replacement of the dominent native kelp Macrosysts pyrifera by the non-native seaweeds Sargaasum horneri and *Undaria pyrifera (Félix-Loaiza et al. 2022).
 

NEP-VIPt. Conception to Southern Baja CaliforniaEcological ImpactHabitat Change
Dense growths of Sargassum horneri may inhibit the movement and feeding of fishes and Spiny Lobsters (Panulirus interruptus sp). However, senescent plants, like S. horneri, are covered with other algae and invertebrates, which are food for fishes and invertebrates (Bushing 2014). Field studies suggested that the replacement of native kelps by S. horneri did not affect fish abundance and diversity, but long-term effects cannot be ruled out (Ginther and Steele 2020).
NEP-VIPt. Conception to Southern Baja CaliforniaEcological ImpactFood/Prey
Sargassum horneri produces toxins which inhibit feeding by native herbivores (Bushing 2014).
NEP-VIPt. Conception to Southern Baja CaliforniaEconomic ImpactAesthetic
Dense growths, decaying fragments, and gametes of Sargassum horneri limit visibility and enjoyment of SCUBA divers (Bushing 2014). Experimental removal of S. horneri was attempted off Santa Catalina Island. Cleeared areas were re-colonized with higher densities of the seaweed, probably due to an unusaul imflux of warm water. Removal will probably be most effective in periods of cooler water, and when targeted to new intorduction sites and sites of biological importance (Marks et al. 2017).
P065_CDA_P065 (Santa Barbara Channel)Ecological ImpactCompetition
In 3 marine protected areas (MPAs) on the coast of Anancapa Island, algal communities resisted the invasion of S. horneri in the oldest MPAs, with more intact kelp forest, but S. horneri was more successful in newest MPAs, and unprotected areas, with more disturbance by recent fishing for sea urchins, and spiny lobsters and California Sheepshead fish (Semicossyphus pulcher), both urchin predators. Fishing for urchin predators reduced overall grazing, favoring competition by native algae (Caselle et al. 2017).
CACaliforniaEcological ImpactCompetition
Observations by divers off Catalina Island indicate that Sargassum horneri may be displacing native seaweeds, and even Giant Kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera). The quick-growing S. horneri may shade out germlings of native seaweeds. This invasion took place during periods of warmer water temperatures, but halted during the cooler winter of 2010-2011 (Bushing 2014). Removal of S. horneri from plots resulted increased Kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), but no change in overall ner community production (Sulloway and Edwards 2020)., In 3 marine protected areas (MPAs) on the coast of Anancapa Island, algal communities resisted the invasion of S. horneri in the oldest MPAs, with more intact kelp forest, but S. horneri was more successful in newest MPAs, and unprotected areas, with more disturbance by recent fishing for sea urchins, and spiny lobsters and California Sheepshead fish (Semicossyphus pulcher), both urchin predators. Fishing for urchin predators reduced overall grazing, favoring competition by native algae (Caselle et al. 2017).
CACaliforniaEcological ImpactFood/Prey
Sargassum horneri produces toxins which inhibit feeding by native herbivores (Bushing 2014).
CACaliforniaEcological ImpactHabitat Change
Dense growths of Sargassum horneri may inhibit the movement and feeding of fishes and Spiny Lobsters (Panulirus interruptus sp). However, senescent plants, like S. horneri, are covered with other algae and invertebrates, which are food for fishes and invertebrates (Bushing 2014).
CACaliforniaEconomic ImpactAesthetic
Dense growths, decaying fragments, and gametes of Sargassum horneri limit visibility and enjoyment of SCUBA divers (Bushing 2014). Experimental removal of S. horneri was attempted off Santa Catalina Island. Cleeared areas were re-colonized with higher densities of the seaweed, probably due to an unusaul imflux of warm water. Removal will probably be most effective in periods of cooler water, and when targeted to new intorduction sites and sites of biological importance (Marks et al. 2017).

Regional Distribution Map

Bioregion Region Name Year Invasion Status Population Status
NWP-3b None 1860 Native Established
NWP-4b None 0 Native Established
NWP-4a None 0 Native Established
EAS-IV None 0 Native Established
EAS-III None 0 Native Established
NWP-3a None 0 Native Established
NEP-VI Pt. Conception to Southern Baja California 2003 Non-native Established
P050 San Pedro Bay 2003 Non-native Established
P058 _CDA_P058 (San Pedro Channel Islands) 2006 Non-native Established
P020 San Diego Bay 2006 Non-native Established
P027 _CDA_P027 (Aliso-San Onofre) 2009 Non-native Established
P062 _CDA_P062 (Calleguas) 2011 Non-native Established
P040 Newport Bay 2010 Non-native Established
P065 _CDA_P065 (Santa Barbara Channel) 2010 Non-native Established
P056 _CDA_P056 (Los Angeles) 2009 Non-native Established
P060 Santa Monica Bay 2004 Non-native Established
P061 _CDA_P061 (Los Angeles) 2012 Non-native Established
P022 _CDA_P022 (San Diego) 2008 Non-native Established
P030 Mission Bay 2012 Non-native Established
P023 _CDA_P023 (San Louis Rey-Escondido) 2013 Non-native Established
NWP-2 None 0 Native Established
EAS-I None 0 Native Established

Occurrence Map

OCC_ID Author Year Date Locality Status Latitude Longitude

References

Abé, Hiroshi and 7 authors (2013) Invertebrate fauna associated with floating Sargassum horneri (Fucales: Sargassaceae) in the East China Sea, Species Diversity 18: 75-85

Aguilar-Rosas, Luis E.; Aguilar-Rosas, Raúl; Kawai, Hiroshi; Uwai, Shinya; Valenzuela-Espinoza, Enrique (2007) New record of Sargassum filicinum Harvey (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) in the Pacific Coast of Mexico, Algae 22(1): 17-21

Anonymous 2009 MARINe monitoring reveals first intertidal occurrence of invasive seaweed <em>Sargassum horneri</em>. <missing URL>



Blanco, Andreu; Beger, Maria; Olabarria, Celia (2021) First confirmed occurrence of Codium fragile (Suringar) Hariot in the Iberian Peninsula coast of Portugal, BioInvasions Records 10: <missing location>

Bushing, Bill 2014 The Invasion of the 'Devil Weed': <em>Sargassum horneri</em> invading California waters. <missing URL>



California Department of Fish and Wildlife (2014) Introduced Aquatic Species in California Bays and Harbors, 2011 Survey, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Sacramento CA. Pp. 1-36

Chen, Daming; Liu, Fang; Zhu, Zhihuang; Lin, Qi; Zeng, Chaoshu; Ye, Haihui (2019) Ontogenetic development of gonads and external sexual characters of the protandric simultaneous hermaphrodite peppermint shrimp, Lysmata vittata (Caridea: Hippolytidae), PLOSOne 14(4): e0215406

Cho, Sung Mi; Lee, Sang Mook; Ko, Yong Deok; Mattio, Lydiane; Boo, Sung Min (2012) Molecular systematic reassessment of Sargassum (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) in Korea using four gene regions, Botanica Marina 55(5): 473-484

Choi, Han Gil; Lee, Ki Hoon; Yoo, Hyun Il; Kang, Pil Jun; Kim, Young Sik; Nam, Ki Wan (2008) Physiological differences in the growth of Sargassum horneri between the germling and adult stages, Journal of Applied Phycology 20: 729-735

Cohen, Andrew N. 2005-2024 Exotics Guide- Non-native species of the North American Pacific Coat. https://www.exoticsguide.org/



Cousens, Roger D.; Ades, Peter K.; Mesgaran, Mohsen B.; Ohadi, Sara (2013) Reassessment of the invasion history of two species of Cakile (Brassicaceae) in Australia, Cunninghamia 13: 275-290
doi: 10.7751cunninghamia.2013.005

Dixon, Rainbo R. M. and 6 authors (2014) North meets south;Taxonomic and biogeographic implications of a phylogenetic assessment of Sargassum subgenera Arthrophycus and Bactrophycus (Fucales, Phaeophyceae), Phycologia 53(1): 15-22

Félix-Loaiza, Ana Carolina; Rodríguez-Bravo, Lucía Mercedes; Beas-Luna, Rodrigo; Lorda, Julio ; e La Cruz-González, Eliot; Malpica-Cruz, Eliot d (2022) Marine heatwaves facilitate invasive algae takeover as foundational kelp, Botanica Marina 65(5): 315-319
https://doi.org/10.1515/bot-2022-0037

Gao, Kunshan; Hua, Wenqin (1997) In situ growth rates of Sargassum horneri (Fucales, Phaeophyta), Phycological Research 45: 55-57

Guiry, M. D.; Guiry, G. M. 2004-2023 AlgaeBase. https://www.algaebase.org/



Hu, Zi-Min; Uwai, Shinya; Yu, Shen-Hui; Komatsu, Teruhisa; Ajisaka, Tetsuro; Duan, De-Lin (2011) Phylogeographic heterogeneity of the brown macroalga Sargassum horneri (Fucaceae) in the northwestern Pacific in relation to late Pleistocene glaciation and tectonic configurations, Molecular Ecology 20: 3894-3909

Jeon, Byung Hee; Yang, Kwon Mo; Kim, Jeong Ha (2015) Changes in macroalgal assemblage with sea urchin density on the east coast of South Korea, Algae 30(2): 139-146

Kaplanis, Nikolas John; Harris, Jill L.; Smith, Jennifer E. (2016) Distribution patterns of the non-native seaweeds Sargassum horneri(Turner) C. Agardh and Undaria pinnatifida (Harvey) Suringar on the San Diego and Pacific coast of North America, Aquatic Invasions 11: In press

Komatsu, Teruhisa; Fukuda, Masahiro; Mikami, Atsuko; Mizuno, Shizuha; Kantachumpoo, Attachai; Tanoue, Hideaki; Kawamiya, Michio (2914) Possible change in distribution of seaweed, Sargassum horneri, in northeast Asia under A2 scenario of global warming and consequent effect on some fish, Marine Pollution Bulletin 85: 317-324

Looby, Audrey; Ginsburg, David W. (2021) Nearshore species biodiversity of a marine protected area off Santa Catalina Island, California, Western North American Naturalist 81(1): 113-130

Marks, L. 2015 <em>Sargassum horneri</em> Information Sheet. <missing URL>



Marks, Lindsay M. and 12 authors (2015) Range expansion of a non-native, invasive macroalga Sargassum horneri(Turner) C. Agardh, 1820 in the eastern Pacific, BioInvasions Records 4(4): 243-248

Miller, Kathy Ann; Aguilar-Rosas, Luis Ernesto; Pedroche, Francisco F. (2011) A review of non-native seaweeds from California, USA and Baja California, Mexico, Hidrobiológica 21(3): 365-379

Miller, Kathy Ann; Engle, John M.; Uwai, Shinya; Kawai, Hiroshi (2007) First report of the Asian seaweed Sargassum filicinum Harvey (Fucales) in California, USA., Biological Invasions 9: 609-613

Mizuno, S.; Ajisaka, T.; Lahbib, S.; Kokubu, Y.; Alabs, M. N.; Komatsu, T. (2014) Spatial distributions of floating seaweeds in the East China Sea from late winter to early spring, Journal of Applied Phycology 26: 1159-1167

NOAA West Coast Fisheries 2015 'Super Sucker' targets highly invasive <em>Sargassum</em> in Southern California. <missing URL>



Ogawa, H (1986) Combined effects of temperature and salinity on the early development of marine algae II. Rhizoid development of Sargassumhorneri, Japanese Journal of Phycology 34(2): <missing location>

Riosmena-Rodríguez, Rafael and 5 authors (2012) The invasive seaweed Sargassum filicinum (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) is on the move along the Mexican Pacific coastline, Botanica Marina 55(5): 547-551

Scagel, R.F. (1956) Introduction of a Japanese alga, Sargassum muticum, into the Northeast Pacific., Fisheries Research Papers, Washington Department of Fisheries 1(4): 49-58

Shinohara, Naoya and 7 authors (2009) The relationship between maturity and quality of boiled products of 'Akamoku' Sargassum horneri collected off Oshima Island (Fukuoka Prefecture), Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi 75(1): 7076

Silva, Paul C.; Menez, Ernani G.; Moe, Richard L. (1987) Catalog of the benthic marine algae of the Philippines, Smithsonian Contributions to the Marine Sciences 27: 1-179

Small, Sadie S.;; Edwards, Matthew S. (2021) Thermal tolerance may slow, but not prevent, the spread of Sargassum horneri (Phaeophyceae) along the California, USA and Baja California, Mex coastline, Journal of Phycology Published online: <missing location>

Tanner, Richelle 2013 USC Dornsife Scientific Diving: An analysis of <em>Sargassum horneri</em> ecosystem impact. <missing URL>



Uchida, Takuji (1993) The life cycle of Sargassum horneri (Phaeophyta) in laboratory culture, Journal of Phycology 29: 231-235

Umezaki, I. (1984) How many eggs will be discharged from the plant of Sargassum horneri, Hydrobiologia 116/117: 398-402

Uwai, Shinya; Kogame, K.; Yoshida, G.; Kawai, H.; Ajisaka, T. (2009) Geographical genetic structure and phylogeography of the Sargassum horneri/filicinum complex in Japan, based on the mitochondrial cox3 haplotype, Marine Biology 156: 901-911

Wang, Jie; Tsang, Ling Ming; Dong, Yun-Wei (2015) Causations of phylogeographic barrier of some rocky shore species along the Chinese coastline, BMC Evolutionary Biology 15(114): Published online

Wilding, Craig S.; Weedall, Gareth D. (2019) Morphotypes of the common beadlet anemone Actinia equina (L.) are genetically distinct, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 570: 61-85
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jembe.2018.10.001

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, United States Navy Dept. Bureau of Ships (1952) Marine fouling and its prevention., United States Naval Institute., Washington, D.C.. Pp. 165-206

Yatsuya, Kousuke (2008) Floating period of Sargassacean thalli estimated by the change in density, Journal of Applied Phycology 20: 797-800

Yoshida, Goro; Murase, Noboru; Arai, Shogo; Terawaki, Toshinobu (2004) Ecotypic differentiation in maturation seasonality among Sargassum horneri (Fucales, Phaeophyta) populations in Hiroshima Bay, Seto Inland Sea, Japan, Phycologia 43(6): 703-7 10