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Best Bull Kelp

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Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

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Best 1 Strongylocentrotus purpuratus

Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, commonly known as the purple sea urchin, is a species of echinoderm found in Pacific coastal waters. It’s notable for its well-studied biology and serves as a key model organism within marine research. Scientists utilize this regular sea urchin, belonging to the Strong...

2 Mesocentrotus franciscanus

Mesocentrotus franciscanus, commonly known as the red sea urchin, is a regular echinoderm belonging to the Strongylocentrotidae family. It inhabits kelp forests along the Pacific coast of North America. This species is notable for its size and commercially harvested roe, which is consumed globally....

3 Mesocentrotus nudus

Mesocentrotus nudus is a regular sea-urchin belonging to the Strongylocentrotidae family. It inhabits kelp forests of the North Pacific, specifically around Japan. This species is notable for its prevalence and role in the ecosystem. Scientists study it to understand urchin populations and their imp...

4 Fresco of the Toreador

The Fresco of the Toreador depicts a Minoan bull-leaping scene discovered at Knossos, Crete. This bronze-age artwork offers insight into the religious and athletic practices of the Minoan civilization. It’s notable for its depiction of a key ritual involving a charging bull and is particularly relev...

5 Macrocystis integrifolia

Giant kelp forming subtidal forests along Pacific coasts of North and South America, one of the world's fastest-growing organisms, capable of exceeding 30 m in length.

6 Holopneustes inflatus

Holopneustes inflatus is a species of sea urchin belonging to the family Temnopleuridae, originally described by Louis Agassiz in 1846.

7 Undaria peterseniana

A brown alga (Alariaceae) closely related to the commercially cultivated wakame (Undaria pinnatifida), native to the temperate coastal waters of Japan, Korea, and China.

8 Holopneustes purpurascens

Holopneustes purpurascens is a species of sea urchin in the family Temnopleuridae, originally described by the Swiss-American zoologist Alexander Agassiz in 1872.

9 Strongylocentrotus polyacanthus

Strongylocentrotus polyacanthus is a species of regular sea urchin in the family Strongylocentrotidae, with a specific epithet meaning 'many-spined' that reflects its prominent spine morphology.

10 Hendrick's Neptunia Gin

Hendrick’s Neptunia Gin is a limited-release expression featuring coastal botanicals like sea buckthorn and samphire alongside the brand’s signature cucumber and rose elements.

11 Nereocystis luetkeana

*Nereocystis luetkeana*, or bull kelp, is an annual brown macroalga prominent along the Pacific Northwest coast, recognized for its long stipe and bulbous flotation chamber.

12 Holopneustes porosissimus

Holopneustes porosissimus is a species of sea urchin classified within the Temnopleuridae family, first formally described by Louis Agassiz in 1846.

13 Strongylocentrotus djakonovi

Strongylocentrotus djakonovi is a species of sea urchin endemic to the cold marine waters of the North Pacific Ocean, first described by Russian zoologist E. N. Baranova in 1957.

14 Ecklonia cava

Brown kelp native to Japan and Korea, notable for high phlorotannin concentrations and extensive use in food, cosmetics, and pharmaceutical research.

15 Hedophyllum sessile

A broad-bladed brown kelp (Laminariaceae) of the northeastern Pacific that entirely lacks a stipe, attaching its undivided blade directly by a holdfast to rocks in the low intertidal zone.

16 Strongylocentrotus pulchellus

Strongylocentrotus pulchellus is a species of sea urchin in the family Strongylocentrotidae, whose Latin specific epithet translates to 'beautiful,' referring to its ornamental appearance.

17 Durvillaea antarctica

*Durvillaea antarctica*, known as cochayuyo, is a robust brown seaweed native to the Southern Hemisphere, traditionally consumed as a staple food in coastal Chile.

18 Laminaria digitata

*Laminaria digitata*, or oarweed, is a large brown kelp found in the North Atlantic that is industrially harvested for alginate, widely used as a food stabilizer.

19 Laminaria pallida

A large brown kelp (Laminariaceae) forming extensive subtidal forests along the cold upwelling coasts of South Africa and Namibia, reaching several meters in length on rocky reefs.

20 Ecklonia radiata

*Ecklonia radiata* is a dominant habitat-forming seaweed found in the temperate reefs of Australia and New Zealand, supporting diverse marine ecosystems and biodiversity.

21 Laminaria hyperborea

*Laminaria hyperborea* is a large brown macroalga that forms extensive kelp forests in the Northeast Atlantic and is heavily harvested in Norway for alginate production.

22 Costaria costata

A brown kelp (Costariaceae) of the North Pacific from Japan to California, immediately identifiable by five prominent parallel ribs running the full length of its broad blade.

23 Lessonia nigrescens

Large brown kelp native to the intertidal and subtidal zones of Chile and Peru, forming dense beds and commercially harvested for alginates and iodine since the 20th century.

24 Ecklonia maxima

*Ecklonia maxima* is a large brown kelp found off the southern African coast, commercially harvested to manufacture natural plant growth stimulants and agricultural fertilizers.

25 Ecklonia brevipes

A subtidal brown kelp (Lessoniaceae) endemic to New Zealand and parts of southern Australia, forming important underwater canopy forests on rocky reefs in cool temperate coastal waters.

26 Ecklonia stolonifera

Brown kelp of Japan and Korea that propagates via stolons, harvested for phlorotannins and studied for antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

27 Lessonia variegata

A large brown kelp (Lessoniaceae) endemic to New Zealand, forming extensive subtidal and low-intertidal forests that serve as critical structural habitat for fish and marine invertebrates.

28 Lessonia trabeculata

Subtidal kelp native to the southeastern Pacific coasts of Chile and Peru, commercially harvested as a major source of alginates and subject to regulated extraction quotas.

29 Laminaria ochroleuca

Kelp with a pale yellowish stipe native to the northeastern Atlantic from Iberia to Norway, among the most commercially harvested European kelp species for alginate extraction.

30 Osmia taurus

Osmia taurus is a solitary mason bee native to East Asia that was introduced to the United States in the early 2000s and is notably expanding its range across the Appalachian region.

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