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Rogue alga routed.


One of the world's worst weeds, Caulerpa taxifolia Caulerpa taxifolia is a species of seaweed (a type of algae), native to the Indian Ocean, that has been commonly used as ornamentation in aquarium installations around the world. , has been eradicated from a lagoon in southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, , government officials reported last month. It was the alga's only known invasion in the Western Hemisphere.

Once marketed globally for use in aquariums, this captive-reared alga seems to have evolved into a form quite unlike its wild brethren (SN: 7/4/98, p. 8). For instance, the escaped alga survives winter chills that would kill its wild kin and has almost no predators. Like a dense shag shag

see cormorant.
 carpet, it smothers natural underwater inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
. Since the species' release in Monaco 2 decades ago, the alga has blanketed large portions of the Mediterranean. The U.S. infestation infestation /in·fes·ta·tion/ (-fes-ta´shun) parasitic attack or subsistence on the skin and/or its appendages, as by insects, mites, or ticks; sometimes used to denote parasitic invasion of the organs and tissues, as by helminths.  seemed to have resulted from a separate aquarium discard.

Immediately after the alga's discovery in the Agua Hedionda Lagoon in Carlsbad, Calif. (SN: 7/15/00, p. 36), government and private organizations created an action team. Whenever team members found Caulerpa, they put a tarp over it and poisoned it with chlorine. In March, the team reported that its regular surveys of the lagoon during the past 4 years had found no sign of the alga. The invader had initially covered roughly 1,500 square meters of the lagoon.

Had the alga not been contained, "it would have irreversibly changed the ecosystem in California's near-shore coastal environment,' says Tim Keeney, deputy assistant secretary of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and . "It was only through the rapid response and cooperative efforts of organizations at all levels that we were successful in preventing an ecological crisis."--J.R.
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Title Annotation:caulerpa taxifolia
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief article
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Aug 19, 2006
Words:258
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