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Original Articles

Leptofauchea coralligena (Faucheaceae, Rhodophyta), a new species from the Mediterranean Sea

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Pages 107-121 | Received 06 Feb 2008, Accepted 27 May 2008, Published online: 12 Mar 2009
 

Abstract

Morphological and reproductive studies, corroborated by gene sequence data, demonstrate that there are two distinct entities within Mediterranean specimens referable to the red alga Rhodymenia ardissonei (Rhodymeniaceae). Genuine R. ardissonei grows in shallow water while specimens from deep water habitats, traditionally attributed to the same species, belong to Leptofauchea, a genus placed in the Faucheaceae. The deep water growth is herein described as a new species, Leptofauchea coralligena. Female gametophytes in Leptofauchea are easily distinguished because of the presence of a tela arachnoidea in the pericarp cavity and tetrasporangia developing in nemathecia. Sterile specimens, however, can be extremely difficult to tell apart because differences in vegetative morphology and anatomy are subtle. Refractive bodies in the medullary cells form the most conspicuous diagnostic character separating L. coralligena from R. ardissonei. These structures can be easily observed in young specimens of L. coralligena, both in surface view and transverse sections. However this character becomes less obvious or even impossible to observe in mature thalli with medullary cells containing large amounts of floridean starch. Refractive bodies are also difficult to observe in herbarium specimens. The existence of these structures has not previously been reported from any other Leptofauchea species. The presence of L. coralligena has been confirmed in the western Mediterranean Sea. Atlantic specimens attributed to R. ardissonei require further study.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by a grant from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology (Ensayo de repoblación de las especies vegetales del coralígeno, CGL2004-05556-C02-01). ODC is indebted to the Research Foundation Flanders for grants as postdoctoral researcher. The authors wish to extend their gratitude to Paul Silva for his indispensable help in clarifying the nomenclature topics of various Rhodymenia species, Caroline Vlaeminck for the assistance with the molecular work, Fabio Rindi for correcting the Latin translation, Enric Ballesteros and Eric Coppejans for additional collections of the new species, Max Hommersand for valuable taxonomic suggestions, and Jordi de Ros and Pere Tur for accompanying the first author as diving partners. We also thank the curators of PAD (Rossella Marcucci), L (Willem Prud’homme van Reine), Museo Civico di Storia Naturale, Venezia (Enrico Ratti) and Le Centre d’Océanologie de Marseille (Marc Verlaque).

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