Dictyota bartayresiana, commonly known as a forded sea tumbleweed, is a species of brown alga found in the tropical western Indo-Pacific region and the Gulf of Mexico. It contains chemicals that are being researched for possible use as antimicrobials, as larvicides and as cytotoxins.
Dictyota bartayresiana grows to a height of 9to, being anchored to the seabed by a variably-shaped holdfast surrounded by rhizoids. The blades are flat and branch dichotomously. The thallus is 6to wide below each junction and 2to wide just above; the sections are 10to long and have no midrib. The margins of the blade are entire and the tips rounded in young fronds and pointed in older ones. The sporangia are 125 to 140 μm in diameter.[1]
This seaweed is found in the tropical western central Pacific Ocean and the tropical western Atlantic Ocean, including the Gulf of Mexico. It occurs at depths down to about 108-1NaN-1.[2]
Several diterpenes and other secondary metabolites are present in D. bartayresiana. The methanolic and chloroform extracts of the seaweed exhibit antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli, Shigella flexneri and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and the petroleum extract exhibits a similar effect against Morganella morganii. The methanolic extract is also effective as a larvicide against the mosquito Culex quinquefasciatus, and shows toxicity to the nauplii larvae of brine shrimps, a proxy for antitumour activity. This means that the seaweed shows promise as a broad spectrum antibacterial, a larvicide and a cytotoxic substance. Further research is needed to identify the active ingredients responsible for these effects.
The diterpenes contained in this alga are distasteful to fish, which avoid eating the seaweed. Pseudamphithoides incurvaria, a species of amphipod, feeds on the seaweed and builds a "domicile" from fragments of the fronds, and lives inside this. This casing deters potential fish predators from eating the amphipod.[3]