All Stories

  1. Evaluating the ability of macroalgae to create a chemical refuge for bivalves under ocean acidification conditions in closed-environment experiments
  2. Editorial: Sustainable seaweed aquaculture: Current advances and its environmental implications
  3. Potential effects of climate change on the growth response of the toxic dinoflagellate Karenia selliformis from Patagonian waters of Chile
  4. First report of the intentionally introduced kelp, Saccharina japonica, in the Pacific coast of southern Chile
  5. Reproductive phenology and morphology of M acrocystis pyrifera (Laminariales, Ochrophyta) from southern New Zealand in relation to wave exposure
  6. Physiological stress modulates epiphyte (Rhizoclonium sp.)-basiphyte (Agarophyton chilense) interaction in co-culture under different light regimes
  7. Stress due to low nitrate availability reduces the biochemical acclimation potential of the giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera to high temperature
  8. Nitrogen sufficiency enhances thermal tolerance in habitat-forming kelp: implications for acclimation under thermal stress
  9. Co-culture in marine farms: macroalgae can act as chemical refuge for shell-forming molluscs under an ocean acidification scenario
  10. Responses of macroalgae to CO 2 enrichment cannot be inferred solely from their inorganic carbon uptake strategy
  11. Copper effects are more important than OA and OW for microscopic stages of kelps
  12. Yield of Macrocystis pyrifera grown close to salmon farms
  13. Physiology of Ulva australis (Chlorophyta) under ocean acidification and ammonium enrichment
  14. Tissue nitrogen status does not alter the physiological responses of Macrocystis pyrifera to ocean acidification
  15. Ocean acidification and kelp development: Reduced pH has no negative effects on meiospore germination and gametophyte development of Macrocystis pyrifera and Undaria pinnatifida
  16. Meiospore development of the kelps Macrocystis pyrifera and Undaria pinnatifida under ocean acidification and ocean warming: independent effects are more important than their interaction
  17. Seawater pH, and not inorganic nitrogen source, affects pH at the blade surface ofMacrocystis pyrifera: implications for responses of the giant kelp to future oceanic conditions
  18. Copper ecotoxicology of marine algae: a methodological appraisal
  19. Copper impedes kelp meiospore development
  20. Sori on nonsporophyllous laminae
  21. Bacteriostatic anti-Vibrio parahaemolyticus activity of Pseudoalteromonas sp. strains DIT09, DIT44 and DIT46 isolated from Southern Chilean intertidal Perumytilus purpuratus
  22. Interacting effects of copper, nitrogen and ultraviolet radiation on the physiology of three south Pacific kelps
  23. Distribution, abundance and diversity of modern dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from southern Chile (43–54° S)