| General Information | Taxonomy and identification | General biology | Habitat preferences and distribution | Reproduction and longevity | Sensitivity | Importance |

Image Keith Hiscock - Sargassum muticum, North Devon. Image width ca XX cm.
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Have you seen Sargassum muticum?
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Sargassum muticum is not listed under any importance categories.
| Paolo Pizzolla |
| Phylum | Ochrophyta | Brown and yellow-green seaweeds |
|---|---|---|
| Class | Phaeophyceae |
| Sargassum muticum has spread along the south coast to the Isles of Scilly and along the north Cornish coast to Lundy. Populations have also been recorded in Strangford Lough, Northern Ireland and Loch Ryan and the Firth of Clyde, Scotland. | |
| Grows on hard substrata in shallow waters and can also tolerate estuarine conditions. It can out-compete local species because it is fast growing, can reproduce within the first year of life and being monoecious can fertilize itself. | |
| A large brown seaweed (with a frond often over 1m long), the stem has regularly alternating branches with flattened oval blades and spherical gas bladders. It is highly distinctive and olive-brown in colour. Wireweed is an invasive species from the Pacific that appeared on the Isle of Wight in 1973, having spread to Britain from France. It competes with native species such as seagrasses and is considered a nuisance in harbours, beaches and shallow waters. |
This review can be cited as follows:
Paolo Pizzolla 2008. Sargassum muticum. Wireweed. Marine Life Information Network: Biology and Sensitivity Key Information Sub-programme [on-line]. Plymouth: Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. [cited 03/09/2010]. Available from: <http://www.marlin.ac.uk/speciesfullreview.php?speciesID=4296>
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