National Committee on Marine Sciences (NCMS)
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- Differences in biomass production and carrageenan yields among four strains of farmed carrageenophytes in Northern Bohol, PhilippinesTrono, Gavino C.; Lluisma, Arturo O. (Springer, 1992-11)Comparative studies on the biomass and carrageenan production of two strains of Eucheuma denticulatum and two strains of Kappaphycus alvarezii were made to assess the seasonality in their production capacities. The high and similar refined carrageenan (RC) yields (43–53% of dry wt.) of the four strains in the first cropping season (June–October) coincided with their high biomass production with plants averaging from 1.1 to 1.8 kg each at harvest. The poor RC yields (21–33%) recorded in the second cropping (October–February) coincided with their season of low biomass (av. wt: 0.34 to 1.0 kg). The four strains, however, recorded contrasting performance in the third cropping season (February–July) with the two E. denticulatum strains recording high RC yields (43 and 42.5%) together with high biomass (av. wt: 1.5 and 1.6 kg) in contrast to the low RC yields (30 and 39%) and low biomass (av. wt. 0.21 and 0.28 kg) of the two K. alvarezii strains. Records for semi-refined carrageenan (SRC) yields in the second and third cropping seasons were quite consistent and similar for the four strains (42–55%), except in the second cropping where the two K. alvarezii strains recorded low SRC. These differences in production potentials highlight the need for cropping management of the four strains to improve their cropping performance.
- Seasonality of standing crop of a Sargassum (Fucales, Phaeophyta) bed in Bolinao, Pangasinan, PhilippinesTrono, Gavino C.; Lluisma, Arturo O. (Springer, 1990-09)The seasonality of standing crop of a Sargassum bed was investigated by conducting monthly sampling from February 1988 to July 1989. Environmental parameters of water movement, salinity, number of daytime minus tides, and water temperature were also measured. An intra-annual pattern of variation in standing crop of Sargassum crassifolium, S. cristaefolium, S. oligocystum, and S. polycystum was observed. Standing crop was generally lowest in February, March, April, or May, and highest in November through January. Sargassum accounted for about 35 to 85% of the monthly algal standing crop of the bed, and the observed variation in overall standing crop of the bed generally reflected the standing crop of Sargassum. The seasonality of the standing crops of the associated algal divisions also followed an annual cycle, but their maximum and minimum standing crops did not coincide with those of Sargassum. Individually, as well as collectively, the standing crops of the Sargassum spp. were poorly correlated with the environmental factors observed.
- Molecular-assisted taxonomic study on the Sargassum C.Agardh (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) in Northwestern Luzon, PhilippinesSantiañez, Wilfred John E.; Lastimoso, John Michael L.; Hoshino, Masakazu; Villafuerte, Brix Nester Q.; Kogame, Kazuhiro; Trono, Gavino C. (Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 2023-10-18)The diversity of the brown algal genus Sargassum C.Agardh in the Philippines is the highest in the tropical western Pacific Ocean. However, most studies on Philippine Sargassum are based on morphoanatomies and the assumption that the genus is very diverse in the country has never been tested based on molecular information. Considering that many Sargassum species are highly polymorphic and the recent advance on Sargassum systematics facilitated by molecular phylogenetic studies, we believe that the species of Sargassum from the Philippines should now be reassessed with the tools of molecular taxonomy. We present here the results of our molecular-assisted taxonomic studies on the Sargassum of the northern Philippines, particularly along the coasts of four coastal provinces in northwestern Luzon (i.e., Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, and Pangasinan). We recognized three distinct species lineages, namely, Sargassum aquifolium (Turner) C.Agardh, Sargassum ilicifolium (Turner) C.Agardh, and Sargassum polycystum C.Agardh based on our molecular analyses of 74 specimens from our study areas. Our morphological observations on the range of characters of these species also suggest that several common Sargassum taxa in the Philippines have been misidentified. Particularly, specimens previously attributed to S. kushimotense Yendo should be referred as S. aquifolium while the widely distributed and highly plastic S. ilicifolium is often confused and identified in the Philippines under several names including S. crassifolium J.Agardh, S. cristaefolium C.Agardh, and S. turbinarioides Grunow. Taken together, our results suggest that Sargassum biodiversity in the Philippines may have been inflated by misidentifications, and, that species diversity is actually much lower than initially thought.