Skip to main content

References

  • Ainis, A. F., Erlandson, J. M., Gill, K. M., Graham, M. H., & Vellanoweth, R. L. (2019). The potential use of seaweeds and marine plants by Native peoples of Alta and Baja California. An archaeology of abundance: reevaluating the marginality of California’s islands. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 135-70.
  • Barner, A. K., C. A. Psister, and J. T. Wooton, 2011. The mixed mating system of the sea palm kelp Postelsea palmaeformis: few costs to selfing. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 278:1347-1355. doi:10.1098/rspb.2010.1928.
  • Blanchette, C. A. (1996). Seasonal patterns of disturbance influence recruitment of the sea palm, Postelsia palmaeformis. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 197(1), 1-
  • Csordas, M., Starko, S., Neufeld, C. J., Thompson, S. A., & Baum, J. K. (2024). Multiscale stability of an intertidal kelp (Postelsia palmaeformis) near its northern range edge through a period of prolonged heatwaves. Annals of Botany, 133(1), 61-72.
  • Hanley, M. E., Firth, L. B., & Foggo, A. (2024). Victim of changes? Marine macroalgae in a changing world. Annals of Botany, 133(1), 1-16.
  • Lightfoot, K. G., Panich, L. M., Schneider, T. D., & Soluri, K. E. (2009). California Indian Uses of Natural Resources. California Indians and Their Environment: An Introduction by KG Lightfoot and O. Parrish, California Natural History Guides, 96, 183-363.
  • Thompson, S. A., Knoll, H., Blanchette, C. A., & Nielsen, K. J. (2010). Population consequences of biomass loss due to commercial collection of the wild seaweed Postelsia palmaeformis. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 413, 17-31.
  • Underhill, R. (1941). Indians of southern California (No. 2). Education Division, US Office of Indian Affairs.