Scientists discovered a massive clone specimen of seaweed a known as bladderwrack along the coast of Sweden, stretching some ...
I discovered seaweed by accident at a local Japanese market five years ago. What started as a curious purchase turned into a ...
A giant clone of bladderwrack seaweed, potentially the world's largest clone, has been identified in the Baltic Sea. This clone, spanning over 500 km, was previously mistaken for a separate species.
Seaweed farming could be the sustainable solution the world has been looking for, but new research from Monash University and ...
Many of the hundreds of types of seaweed that grow in Scotland's strong tides are edible, delicious and healthy.
The clone of bladderwrack in the Baltic Sea was long assumed to be a separate species, which was called narrow seaweed. Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have discovered that what was ...
Seaweed clones face an uncertain future as the Baltic Sea is affected by climate change. Without constant sexual reproduction, there are few genetic changes and adaptations in the genetic material ...