UAF researchers discover complex ecosystem among Alaska seaweed debris

A wrack line and outgoing tide wave action is seen at Bluff Point in Kachemak Bay.
Photo by Brian Ulaski
A wrack line and outgoing tide wave action is seen at Bluff Point in Kachemak Bay.

汤姆视频 researchers have discovered a thriving ecosystem among the decomposing seaweed debris that covers many Alaska beaches, including nearly 100 different types of invertebrates found in surveys at a handful of sites on the Kenai Peninsula.

It鈥檚 the first Alaska-based survey of the marine algae that washes up on beaches, known as wrack, and comes at a time when global interest in the resource is booming. Wrack is being increasingly used for fertilizer and livestock feed, although harvests in Alaska remain limited.

Studies in the Lower 48, Europe and Australia have shown that wrack provides a unique and productive habitat, but no one had seriously examined it in Alaska before. 

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 just want to generalize what we know from other regions,鈥 said Brian Ulaski, a postdoctoral fellow at UAF鈥檚 College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences. 鈥淭hings are a little different up here with seasonal light and temperature changes.鈥

Ulaski led the project, which was funded by Alaska Sea Grant, while pursuing his Ph.D. at UAF. The .

A pseudoscorpion was among the samples of invertebrates found at Kenai Peninsula sites.
Photo by Brian Ulaski
A pseudoscorpion was among the samples of invertebrates found at Kenai Peninsula sites.

Researchers focused on a dozen sites around Kachemak Bay near Homer in summer 2021, collecting sediment cores using a clam gun. After sieving the sediment through a fine mesh screen, thousands of samples were bagged and returned to the Kasitsna Bay Laboratory for identification and counting.

Ulaski and a team of undergraduate and graduate students found about 47,000 tiny invertebrates among those specimens. With help from Derek Sikes, the curator of insects at the University of Alaska Museum of the North, they identified 87 different taxa among the collection, including tiny coastal centipedes and pseudoscorpions.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like a whole little ecosystem we didn鈥檛 know much about,鈥 said CFOS professor Brenda Konar, who helped secure grant funding for the project.

Researchers also collected samples from beaches without wrack. The difference was striking, with far fewer specimens and less diversity. The bare beach samples consisted almost entirely of worms. 

The findings could be valuable for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, which manages wrack use in the state but previously knew little about the resource. 

Brian Ulaski and Jennifer Tusten collect cores from the wrack line at Camel Rock in Kachemak Bay in summer 2021.
Photo by Alice Bailey
Brian Ulaski and Jennifer Tusten collect cores from the wrack line at Camel Rock in Kachemak Bay in summer 2021.

Relatively small amounts of wrack are being harvested in Alaska, with personal use capped by ADFG at two buckets per day. Three or four commercial harvest permits have been written annually in lower Cook Inlet in recent years. However, interest in collecting seaweed is clearly on the upswing, resource managers said.

鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 know much about something, and there鈥檚 growing pressure to harvest it, obviously you want to know more,鈥 said Ted Otis, a Homer-based ADFG research biologist. 鈥淧artnering with the university to do research in that area is a great match.鈥

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Brian Ulaski, 907-987-3201, bpulaski2@alaska.edu

207-23