JockoBailey wrote:
Hardy and decorative, Caulerpa seemed a blessing at first, and it
soon
became the most popular aquarium plant on Earth. The Monaco
Oceanographic
Museum obtained a sample, and it was in the harbor just beneath this
institution-where famed oceanographer Jacques Cousteau was the
director at
the time-that Caulerpa was first spotted getting a toehold in nature.
The
killer algae have been spreading ever since.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/algae/
Jocko
I would not call it killer really, but indirectly it can kill other
critters and plants. Hydrilla could also be called this if someone
tried to swim through a thicket, or from West Nile virus habitat
vectors(mosquitos etc).
443 milion pounds of seafood was taken in and around CA 2001,
prevention is the best method they have at control.
http://www.swrcb.ca.gov/rwqcb9/progr.../caulerpa.html
Regards,
Tom Barr