PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Bald reef gets new growth with seaweed transplant

2014-01-14
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Deborah Smith
deborah.smith@unsw.edu.au
61-293-857-307
University of New South Wales
Bald reef gets new growth with seaweed transplant

SYDNEY: Marine ecologists in Sydney have successfully restored a once thriving seaweed species, which vanished along a stretch of the city's coastline during the 1970s and 80s during high levels of sewage outfalls.

A team of researchers from UNSW, the Sydney Institute of Marine Science and the NSW Department of Primary Industries has transplanted fertile specimens of the missing crayweed (Phyllospora comosa) onto two barren reef sites where it once grew abundantly.

They took seaweed from Palm Beach and Cronulla and transplanted it to Long Bay and Cape Banks. Their results are reported in the journal PLOS ONE.

"Seaweeds are the 'trees' of the oceans, providing habitat structure, food and shelter for other marine organisms, such as crayfish and abalone," says lead author, Dr Alexandra Campbell, from the UNSW Centre for Marine Bio-Innovation.

"The transplanted crayweed not only survived similarly to those in natural populations, but they also successfully reproduced. This creates the potential for a self-sustaining population at a place where this species has been missing for decades," she says.

Large brown seaweeds – known as macroalgae – along temperate coastlines, like those in NSW, also encourage biodiversity and are important to the region's fishing and tourism industries.

However, these seaweed ecosystems face increasing threats of degradation due to human impacts and ocean warming. The authors say the potential environmental and economic implications of losing these habitats would be comparable to the more highly publicised loss of Australia's tropical coral reefs.

In 2008, researchers from UNSW and the NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) showed that a 70 km stretch of this important habitat-forming crayweed had vanished from the Sydney coast decades earlier, coinciding with a period known for high levels of sewage.

Despite improved water quality around Sydney after the introduction of better infrastructure in the 1990s, which pumped sewage into the deeper ocean, the 70 km gap of depleted 'underwater forest' – between Palm Beach and Cronulla - has never been able to recover naturally.

Now, with some well-executed intervention, it looks as though this habitat-forming crayweed could make a successful comeback in Sydney's coastal waters.

"This is an environmental good news story," says research supervisor UNSW Professor Peter Steinberg, Director of the Sydney Institute of Marine Science.

"This kind of restoration study has rarely been done in these seaweed-dominated habitats, but our results suggest that we may be able to assist in the recovery of underwater forests on Sydney's reefs, potentially enhancing biodiversity and recreational fishing opportunities along our coastline."

The researchers say their results could provide valuable insights for restoring similar macroalgae marine ecosystems in Australia and globally, but further research is needed to understand the complex processes that affect recruitment and survival.



INFORMATION:

This project was funded in part by a grant from the NSW Recreational Fishing Trust.

Images: A natural Phyllospora comosa habitat and a research team member carries out seaweed restoration work. Credit: UNSW

Media Contacts:

Dr Alexandra Campbell: alexandra.campbell@unsw.edu.au

Professor Peter Steinberg: p.steinberg@unsw.edu.au

UNSW Science media: Deborah Smith, + 612 9385 7307, + 61 478 492 060, Deborah.smith@unsw.edu.au



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mitochondrial genes matter!

2014-01-14
Mitochondrial genes matter! Contrary to common belief, mitochondrial genes seem to matter for how well individuals survive and reproduce. These new results are reported by researchers at Uppsala University, Sweden, who studied the genes of a common beetle ...

Patients with multiple sclerosis in Taiwan may be at increased risk of developing cancer

2014-01-14
Patients with multiple sclerosis in Taiwan may be at increased risk of developing cancer Individuals with multiple sclerosis may have an increased risk of developing any type of cancer, with an especially high risk of developing breast cancer. That is the conclusion of a ...

New research on sauropod gigantism summarized in publicly available collection

2014-01-14
New research on sauropod gigantism summarized in publicly available collection Giants of Earth's history still pose a wealth of riddles / Publication in PLOS ONE Sauropods, the largest land animals in Earth's history, are still ...

Molecular nano-spies to make light work of disease detection

2014-01-14
Molecular nano-spies to make light work of disease detection A world of cloak-and-dagger pharmaceuticals has come a step closer with the development of stealth compounds programmed to spring into action when they receive the ...

Do cultural differences determine outcome of our activities?

2014-01-14
Do cultural differences determine outcome of our activities? Not necessarily, say researchers Jerusalem, January 14, 2014 -- A generally held assumption in various academic disciplines is that the way people perform various everyday activities – ...

Cell division discovery could offer fresh insight into cancer

2014-01-14
Cell division discovery could offer fresh insight into cancer New findings on how the cells in our bodies are able to renew themselves could aid our understanding of health disorders, including cancer. Scientists have explained a key part of the process ...

Physical reason for chromosome shape discovered

2014-01-14
Physical reason for chromosome shape discovered This work gives a solution to a fundamental question in structural biology: Why do metaphase chromosomes have their characteristic elongated cylindrical shape? The proposed solution is consistent ...

What makes superalloys super -- hierarchical microstructure of a superalloy

2014-01-14
What makes superalloys super -- hierarchical microstructure of a superalloy Researchers have observed for the first time in detail how a hierarchical microstructure develops during heat treatment of a superalloy This ...

What your candles and TV screen have in common

2014-01-14
What your candles and TV screen have in common New research finding will be of value to the plastics industry The next time you light a candle and switch on your television ready for a relaxing evening at home, just think. These two vastly different ...

Study: CT scans could bolster forensic database to ID unidentified remains

2014-01-14
Study: CT scans could bolster forensic database to ID unidentified remains A study from North Carolina State University finds that data from CT scans can be incorporated into a growing forensic database to help determine the ancestry and sex of unidentified ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

OET inaugural cover | 30 years of nanoimprint lithography: Leading the new era of nanomanufacturing

Metalens evolution: From individual devices to integrated arrays

Advancing disaster response with the EBD dataset

Putting solar panels in space could aid Europe’s net-zero transition

Ambient documentation technologies reduce physician burnout and restore ‘joy’ in medicine

Solar panels in space could cut Europe’s renewable energy needs by 80%

Computational approach meets biology to connect neural progenitor cells with human disorders

GLP-1 receptor agonists and cancer risk in adults with obesity

Impact of a weight loss intervention on 1-year weight change in women with stage II/III breast cancer

Novel tool helps identify key targets to strengthen CAR NK cell therapies

New RP-HPLC method for orlistat analysis validated

How AI will transform mental health support for patients with breast cancer

First observations by the Total Anthropogenic and Natural emissions mapping SpectrOmeter-3 (TANSO-3) onboard the Global Observing SATellite for Greenhouse gases and Water cycle “IBUKI GW” (GOSAT-GW)

Optimizing how cells self-organize

Impact of cancer on forensic DNA methylation age estimation

Researchers use photonic origami to fold glass into microscopic 3D optical devices

Dr. Matthew Greenblatt awarded Paul-Gallin Trailblazer Prize for bone stem cell discoveries

Natural products used as disinfectants in prosthodontics and oral implantology

A multisensor approach to accurate snow water equivalent retrieval from space

Researchers find ways to improve liquid hydrogen tank efficiency

New era in transthyretin amyloidosis: From stabilizers to gene editing

Cumulative hepatitis B surface antigen/hepatitis B virus DNA ratio in immune-tolerant hepatitis B patients

Increased patient-provider communication, education about COPD needed to improve patient care

Nation’s leading breast health advocate receives Benjamin Spock Award for Compassion in Medicine

Chung-Ang University researchers demonstrate paper electrode-based crawling soft robots

New tracer could enable surgeons to see and hear prostate cancer

One catalyst, two reactions: Toward more efficient chemical synthesis

Regenerative agriculture highlighted as a transformative approach to ecological farming and soil recovery

SLAS Technology unveils AI-powered diagnostics & future lab tech

Hospital stays among migrants in Austria much lower than among Austrians

[Press-News.org] Bald reef gets new growth with seaweed transplant