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Morphology of Laurencia clavata and L. elata (Ceramiales, Rhodophyta) in relation to generic circumscription in the Laurencia complex

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2001

KI WAN NAM
Affiliation:
Department of Marine Biology, Pukyong National University, Nam-gu, Pusan 608-737, Korea
HAN GIL CHOI
Affiliation:
Department of Marine Biology, Pukyong National University, Nam-gu, Pusan 608-737, Korea
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Abstract

Laurencia Lamouroux (Rhodophyta) was recently separated into three genera – Laurencia, Chondrophycus (Tokida et Saito) Garbary et Harper and Osmundea Stackhouse – each of which was newly defined based on vegetative and reproductive structures. In this study, the previously unknown vegetative and reproductive morphology of two Australian endemic species of Laurencia, L. clavata Sonder and L. elata (C. Agardh) Harvey, was studied, particularly in the context of the revised generic delineation. These species exhibit vegetative axes with four pericentral cells and trichoblast-type spermatangial development. Tetrasporangia are abaxially produced from the existing third and fourth pericentral cells. L. clavata has terete thalli with distinctive verticillate branching and is similar to Chondria C. Agardh, rather than to Laurencia, in having an unusually marked constriction at the base of the branches and starch accumulation in subcortical and medullary cells. Compared to Laurencia, apical cells of this species exhibit a less oblique division; the resulting recognizable axial cell rows extend somewhat below the branches, and particularly at a young stage they are also clear throughout branchlets. However, other vegetative and spermatangial structures show that L. clavata is more closely allied to Laurencia than to Chondria, and it is placed in Laurencia. By contrast, L. elata exhibits morphology typical of Laurencia and is characterized by large, robust, compressed thalli with fastigiately distichous branching and an extensive secondary cortex. Furthermore, it appears to be distinct from similar species in sometimes having a parasitic species of Janczewskia Solms-Laubach (Rhodophyta). Taxonomy of Laurencia is discussed on the basis of these and previous studies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2001 British Phycological Society

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