Isabella A. Abbott’s research while affiliated with University of Hawaii System and other places

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Publications (90)


Can stormwater be detected by algae in an urban reef in Hawai'i?
  • Article

April 2013

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112 Reads

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10 Citations

Marine Pollution Bulletin

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Isabella A Abbott

Nitrogen (N) enrichment of tropical reefs can result in the dominance of invasive algae. The invasive alga Acanthophora spicifera and the native alga Laurencia nidifica are part of a diverse reef assemblage in 'Ewa Beach, O'ahu. Their N contents and δ(15)N values were investigated to determine if N was enriched and to evaluate potential nitrogenous sources near and removed from storm-drain outlets. δ(15)N values of algae (3.8-17.7‰) were within and above the range for algae around the island (1.9-11.9‰). Elevated algae N isotope values (δ(15)N>+7‰, [N]>1.6%) and seawater nitrate+nitrite levels (0.59-7.93μM) indicated a mixed, high nutrient environment. The overlap in δ(15)N values with multiple nitrogenous sources precluded identification. However, spatial and temporal patterns did not support stormwater as the dominant, nitrogenous source. Patterns were congruent with algal incorporation of terrestrial derived N, subjected to a high degree of biogeochemical cycling.


Figure 1A-H. Veleroa subulata Dawson: A, habit (us5529), scale bar = 500 μm; B, branch apex (us5529), scale bar = 250 μm; C, decumbent axis showing multicellular attachment rhizoids (arrows) originating between adjacent pericentral cells and terminating in expanded pads (us13193), scale bar = 250 μm; D, tetrasporangia in long series, spirally placed within polysiphonous indeterminate branches (us13193), scale bar = 250 μm; E, tetrasporangia cut off close to plant apex (us8594), scale bar = 100 μm; F, spermatangia forming in an intercalary position on trichoblasts (I.A.7810a), scale bar = 50 μm; G, spermatangia forming in an intercalary position on trichoblasts (I.A.7810a), scale bar = 25 μm; H, spermatantial showing distal sterile cells (I.A.7810a), scale bar = 25 μm.
Figure 2A – H. Veleroa setteana Abbott & Ballantine, n. sp.: A, habit of the holotype (I.A.29251), scale bar = 5.0 cm; B, axis apex with indeterminate branches (I.A.31228), scale bar = 250 μm; C, branch apex showing numerous laterally produced indeterminate branches (I.A.31228), scale bar = 100 μm; D, exogenously produced trichoblasts (I.A.31262), scale bar = 100 μm; E, initiation of cortication (I.A.31228), scale bar = 100 μm; F, heavy cortication in mature axis (I.A.23268), scale bar = 100 μm; G, transverse section through mature thallus (I.A.23268), scale bar = 500 μm; H, indeterminate axes bearing tetrasporangia (I.A.23268), scale bar = 1.0 mm.  
Figure 3A – B. Veleroa setteana Abbott & Ballantine, n. sp.: A, principal axis as well as indeterminate lateral branches producing tetrasporangia (I.A.23268), scale bar = 250 μm; B, pericarp (I.A.31603), scale bar = 100 μm.  
Veleroa setteana , n. sp. (Rhodophyta: Rhodomelaceae), from the Hawaiian Archipelago, Including Notes on the Generitype 1
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  • Full-text available

July 2012

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103 Reads

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1 Citation

Pacific Science

A new species of Veleroa, V. setteana Abbott & Ballantine, has been collected from the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Veleroa setteana is among the larger of the Veleroa species, reaching a height of 30 cm. The new species is highly corticated with cortication beginning in young thallus portions. Tetrasporangia, which measure up to 60 µm in diameter, possess three cover cells and are produced in principal indeterminate axes and more commonly in short indeterminate laterals. The genus Veleroa is properly placed in the Brongniartelleae.

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A taxonomic study of the genus padina (dictyotales, phaeophyceae) including the descriptions of four new species from japan, hawaii, and the andaman sea

September 2011

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3,915 Reads

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42 Citations

Journal of Phycology

A taxonomic study of the genus Padina from Japan, Southeast Asia, and Hawaii based on morphology and gene sequence data (rbcL and cox3) resulted in the recognition of four new species, that is, Padina macrophylla and Padina ishigakiensis from Ryukyu Islands, Japan; Padina maroensis from Hawaii; and Padina usoehtunii from Myanmar and Thailand. All species are bistratose and morphologically different from one another as well as from any known taxa by a combination of characters relating to degree of calcification; the structure, position, and arrangement of hairlines (HLs) and reproductive sori; and the presence or absence of rhizoid-like groups of hairs and an indusium. Molecular phylogenetic analyses demonstrated a close relationship between P. ishigakiensis, P. macrophylla, P. maroensis, and Padina australis Hauck. The position of P. usoehtunii, however, was not fully resolved, being either sister to a clade comprising the other three new species and P. australis in the rbcL tree or more closely related to a clade comprising several other recently described species in the cox3 tree. The finding of the four new species demonstrates high species diversity particularly in southern Japan. The following characters were first recognized here to be useful for species delimitation: the presence or absence of small rhizoid-like groups of hairs on the thallus surface, structure and arrangement of HLs on both surfaces either alternate or irregular, and arrangement of the alternating HLs between both surfaces in equal or unequal distance. The evolutionary trajectory of these and six other morphological characters used in species delineation was traced on the phylogenetic tree.


Figure 1. Location of Johnston Atoll in relationship to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, the main Hawaiian Islands, the Line Islands, the Phoenix Islands, and the Marshall Islands. 
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Figure 2. Locations of established NOAA monitoring stations at Johnston Atoll. The barrier reef is located on the north and west side of Johnston Island with the south and east side open to the sea. 
Marine Benthic Algae of Johnston Atoll: New Species Records, Spatial Distribution, and Taxonomic Affinities with Neighboring Islands

October 2010

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173 Reads

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6 Citations

Pacific Science

Forty-five of the 107 species of marine benthic algae collected during 2004 and 2006 NOAA cruises to isolated Johnston Atoll and two additional species from earlier collections represent new species records. Total number of algae is now increased to 189 species: 26 species of cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), 105 species of red algae, 15 species of brown algae, and 43 species of green algae. The macroalga Caulerpa serrulata and the epiphyte Lomentaria hakodatensis were the most widely distributed species at Johnston Atoll based on frequency of occurrence at 10 of 12 stations and 8 of 12 stations, respectively, during the 2004 NOAA cruise. Despite the atoll’s isolation, the parasitic red alga Neotenophycus ichthyosteus and the cyanobacterium Borzia elongata are the only endemic algal species on Johnston Atoll. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling analyses indicate that taxonomic affinities of Johnston Atoll lie between French Frigate Shoals and Wake Atoll. In terms of atolls, biodiversity of the marine flora of Johnston Atoll (i.e., 189 species) is surpassed only by the 256 algal species of the much-larger and better-studied Enewetak Atoll in the Marshall Islands.




An Overview of Marine Biodiversity in United States Waters

August 2010

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6,107 Reads

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162 Citations

Marine biodiversity of the United States (U.S.) is extensively documented, but data assembled by the United States National Committee for the Census of Marine Life demonstrate that even the most complete taxonomic inventories are based on records scattered in space and time. The best-known taxa are those of commercial importance. Body size is directly correlated with knowledge of a species, and knowledge also diminishes with distance from shore and depth. Measures of biodiversity other than species diversity, such as ecosystem and genetic diversity, are poorly documented. Threats to marine biodiversity in the U.S. are the same as those for most of the world: overexploitation of living resources; reduced water quality; coastal development; shipping; invasive species; rising temperature and concentrations of carbon dioxide in the surface ocean, and other changes that may be consequences of global change, including shifting currents; increased number and size of hypoxic or anoxic areas; and increased number and duration of harmful algal blooms. More information must be obtained through field and laboratory research and monitoring that involve innovative sampling techniques (such as genetics and acoustics), but data that already exist must be made accessible. And all data must have a temporal component so trends can be identified. As data are compiled, techniques must be developed to make certain that scales are compatible, to combine and reconcile data collected for various purposes with disparate gear, and to automate taxonomic changes. Information on biotic and abiotic elements of the environment must be interactively linked. Impediments to assembling existing data and collecting new data on marine biodiversity include logistical problems as well as shortages in finances and taxonomic expertise.




Citations (62)


... The Belizean plants, however, differ in several respects: the assimilatory filaments are shorter in length; the cystocarps on the same thallus have both elongated (= "pedicellate" of Abbott and Doty, 1960) and non-elongated primary cells of the carpogonial branch; and the gonimoblastic rhizoids are well developed on mature cystocarps in contrast to the weakly developed ones of T. ...

Reference:

Marine Algae and Seagrasses from Carrie Bow Cay, Belize
STUDIES IN THE HELMINTHOCLADIACEAE. II. TRICHOGLOEOPSIS
  • Citing Article
  • October 1960

American Journal of Botany

... Intensely staining, papillate protrusions or longer hair-like initials are often present crowning apical cortical cells (Fig. 6), and though there appears to have been a pair at one time, usually only one is observed to one side, with the cell wall remnants (presumably) of a missing partner on the other side. Similar structures labeled "glandular cells" in G. fractalis were hypothesized to have a mucilage producing role (Huisman and Kraft 1994), and for the allied genus Trichogloea, Abbott and Huisman (2005) suggested similar terminal protrusions were 3. Primary medullary filament cells, within 10 mm of a branch tip, each bearing the basal cell of a primary cortical fascicle at its distal end (RHS-80-392). ...

Studies in the Liagoraceae (Nemaliales, Rhodophyta) I. The genus Trichogloea
  • Citing Article
  • June 2005

Phycological Research

... In this foundational work, Abbott detailed 14 seaweed species integral to Hawaiian diets, providing their scienti c classi cations and local names, along with instructions for their preparation and consumption. Abbott's research has been fundamental in advancing the academic understanding of seaweeds and has played a crucial role in preserving and promoting their cultural signi cance and utilization within Hawaiian cuisine (Huisman & Abbott 2007). ...

Hawaiian reef plants
  • Citing Article
  • January 2007

... elegans" showed three distinct lineages (lineages 1, 2, and 3) with strong statistical support (Figure 2). The remaining four clades consisted of: 1) a circumtropical D. "marginata" clade, represented in the Caribbean; noteworthy is the absence of a D. marginata type specimens and unavailability of specimens from the original type locality, the Bahamas; 2) D. "marginata" from the Indian Ocean, closely associated with the circumtropical D. "marginata"; 3) a second D. "marginata" clade, circumscribed to the Caribbean; and 4) a Hawaiian species, most probably corresponding to the species formerly categorized as G. infirma, a subterete variation of D. marginata (Huisman et al., 2004a). Indeed, we observed these specimens to be subterete in gross morphology. ...

Studies of Hawaiian Galaxauraceae (Nemaliales, Rhodophyta): Large subunit rDNA gene sequences support conspecificity of Galaxaura rugosa and G. subverticillata
  • Citing Article
  • October 2004

Cryptogamie Algologie

... This re-evaluation of the group is clearly an important area for further research. This study is the fifth in a series describing the Liagoraceae of the Hawaiian Islands, the earlier parts dealing with Gloiotrichus (Huisman & Abbott, 2003a), the species of Liagora with quadripartite carposporangia (Abbott & Huisman, 2003), the genus Ganonema (Huisman et al., in press), and the species of Liagora described by Butters (1911) (Huisman & Abbott, 2003b). These and numerous earlier studies on the group indicate that the archipelago is a rich source of material and continues to provide new and interesting taxa. ...

The Liagoraceae (Nemaliales, Rhodophyta) of the Hawaiian Islands IV: The species of Liagora described by Butters (1911)
  • Citing Article
  • November 2003

Cryptogamie Algologie

... Scientists have been trying to find solutions to reduce methane emissions in cattle for decades, and many natural products have been investigated. During a screening of multiple species of algae, it was observed that Asparagopsis taxiformis, a cosmopolitan red seaweed also known as limu kohu or red sea plume, could lead to a 90% reduction in methane production from livestock when they were fed it in small quantities (Abbott, 1996;Andreakis et al., 2004;Kinley et al., 2016). Subsequent in vivo and in vitro studies have observed that A. taxiformis has the largest and most consistent patterns of methane reduction in ruminant animals compared to other algae and commercially available inhibitors (Lopes et al., 2016;Machado et al., 2014). ...

Ethnobotany of seaweeds: Clues to uses of seaweeds
  • Citing Article
  • January 1996

Hydrobiologia

... One of the earliest attempts at assessing the composition of Hawaiian mesophotic macroalgal communities was conducted by Doty et al. (1974) (Kahng et al., 2019) with application of molecular systematics to dominant mesophotic macroalgal genera (Sherwood et al., 2010), an overwhelming number of putative new species were discovered expanding the known algal biodiversity in Hawaiʻi, majority of which, is in need of reexamination of its current taxonomic definitions (Abbott & Huisman, 2003;Agegian et al., 1985;Norris et al., 1995;Tsuda, 2014). ...

Hawaiian marine algae from seaward of the algal ridge
  • Citing Article
  • December 1974

Phycologia