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  2. Ulva lactuca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulva_lactuca

    Ulva lactuca is a thin flat green alga growing from a discoid holdfast. The margin is somewhat ruffled and often torn. The margin is somewhat ruffled and often torn. It may reach 18 centimetres (7 in) or more in length, though generally much less, and up to 30 cm (12 in) across. [ 3 ]

  3. Ulva australis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulva_australis

    Ulva australis, the southern sea lettuce, is a species of bright green coloured seaweed in the family Ulvaceae that can be found in waters around Australia and was first described by Swedish botanist Johan Erhard Areschoug. It is an edible green algae, although sometimes designated as a seaweed. [1]

  4. Sea lettuce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_lettuce

    Sea lettuce is eaten by a number of different sea animals, including manatees and the sea slugs known as sea hares. Many species of sea lettuce are a food source for humans in Scandinavia, Great Britain, Ireland, China, and Japan (where this food is known as aosa). Sea lettuce as a food for humans is eaten raw in salads and cooked in soups.

  5. Ulva intestinalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulva_intestinalis

    Ulva intestinalis is a green alga in the family Ulvaceae, known by the common names sea lettuce, green bait weed, gutweed, [1] and grass kelp. [2] Until they were reclassified by genetic work completed in the early 2000s, the tubular members of the sea lettuce genus Ulva were placed in the genus Enteromorpha .

  6. Ulvophyceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulvophyceae

    The Ulvophyceae or ulvophytes are a class of green algae, [3] distinguished mainly on the basis of ultrastructural morphology, life cycle and molecular phylogenetic data. [4] The sea lettuce, Ulva, belongs here. Other well-known members include Caulerpa, Codium, Acetabularia, Cladophora, Trentepohlia and Monostroma.

  7. Ulva prolifera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulva_prolifera

    The green tides caused by the overgrowth of Ulva prolifera in the Yellow Sea of China have been occurring every summer since 2007. The green tide is a major environmental concern that involves the impacts from natural, anthropogenic, physicochemical and algae factors along with the warming of local water.

  8. Green laver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_laver

    Raw parae (green laver). Green laver (/ ˈ l eɪ v ər, ˈ l ɑː v ər /), known as aonori (アオノリ; 青海苔) in Japan, sea cabbage (海白菜) or hutai (滸苔) in China, and parae (파래) and kim (김) in Korean, is a type of edible green seaweed, including species from the genera Monostroma and Ulva (Ulva prolifera, Ulva pertusa, Ulva intestinalis).

  9. Umbraulva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbraulva

    The genus Umbraulva was first described by Bae and Lee in 2011. [1] After studying the morphology of Ulva japonica (Holmes), Ulva amamiensis, and Ulva olivascens, and analyzing their DNA sequences, Bae and Lee proposed the new genus Umbraulva, and placed the three species they initially studied into that genus as Umbraulva japonica (Holmes), Umbraulva amamiensis (Tanaka), and Umbraulva ...

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