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1 June 2008 Anoxic Propagule Survival in Vaucheria (Vaucheriales, Heterokontophyta) from New England Riparan Sediments
Craig W. Schneider, Alison A. Parpal, Caitlyn Hunt, Ravin Ratan
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Abstract

Species of the alga Vaucheria occur throughout the world growing in and on the surface of marine, brackish, and freshwater sediments. This resilient genus has the ability to survive extreme environmental stresses by depositing hardy, dormant “seed banks” of propagules, mostly commonly oospheres, into the sediments. The present study investigates the effect of extended periods of anoxia on the survival of Vaucheria propagules. Sediment samples from a flooded riparian zone in Ashford, Connecticut, a habitat where multiple species of Vaucheria have been known to grow, were placed in anoxic Bio-BagTM chambers for 15 months. Our results demonstrate that three species, V. aversa, V. uncinata, and V. undulata, are able to survive at least five months of anoxia, with V. aversa and V. uncinata surviving one year lacking O2.

Craig W. Schneider, Alison A. Parpal, Caitlyn Hunt, and Ravin Ratan "Anoxic Propagule Survival in Vaucheria (Vaucheriales, Heterokontophyta) from New England Riparan Sediments," Rhodora 110(942), 217-224, (1 June 2008). https://doi.org/10.3119/07-18.1
Published: 1 June 2008
KEYWORDS
anoxia
propagules
riparian sediments
seed bank
Vaucheria
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