k Bladder wrack seaweed Bladder wrack seaweed Fucus vesiculosus. The name of the seaweed derives from the paired air bladders visible on either side of the midrib of the fronds. The air bladders keep the seaweed blade buoyant and near the surface of the water when the tide is in, so that photosynthesis can take place. Seaweed is a marine algae, some species of which float freely in the sea and some, as here, are attached to the shore. It was used as a treatment for goitre an iodine deficiency as it is rich in iodine., Photo by MARTYN F. CHILLMAIDSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Bladder wrack seaweed Bladder wrack seaweed  Fucus vesiculosus . The name of the seaweed derives from the paired air bladders visible on either side of the midrib of the fronds. The air bladders keep the seaweed blade buoyant and near the surface of the water when the tide is in, so that photosynthesis can take place. Seaweed is a marine algae, some species of which float freely in the sea and some, as here, are attached to the shore. It was used as a treatment for goitre  an iodine deficiency  as it is rich in iodine., Photo by MARTYN F. CHILLMAID SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
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Bladder wrack seaweed

Bladder wrack seaweed (Fucus vesiculosus). The name of the seaweed derives from the paired air bladders visible on either side of the midrib of the fronds. The air bladders keep the seaweed blade buoyant and near the surface of the water when the tide is in, so that photosynthesis can take place. Seaweed is a marine algae, some species of which float freely in the sea and some, as here, are attached to the shore. It was used as a treatment for goitre (an iodine deficiency) as it is rich in iodine., Photo by MARTYN F. CHILLMAID/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

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