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Articles

Rhytimenia, a new genus of red algae based on the rare Kallymenia maculata (Kallymeniaceae, Rhodophyta)

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Pages 299-307 | Received 17 Nov 2015, Accepted 29 Jan 2016, Published online: 21 Mar 2019
 

Abstract:

Morphological and molecular analyses of newly collected samples of the rare Kallymenia maculata, described originally from specimens collected during the Siboga Expedition but never recollected, indicated that the species was incorrectly placed in the genus Kallymenia and did not conform to any existing genera. The new genus Rhytimenia is described to accommodate this species, distinguished morphologically by its gelatinous, bullate thallus; angular (in surface view) outer cortical cells; wholly filamentous medulla lacking ganglionic or refractive cells; and monocarpogonial branch system with spherical subsidiary cells. The autonomy of Rhytimenia was supported by molecular analyses (COI-5P, nuclear ribosomal large subunit gene, rbcL) that resolved K. maculata as only distantly allied to other Kallymeniaceae and clearly incorrectly assigned to Kallymenia based on the position of the generitype Kallymenia reniformis. A second species, Rhytimenia cerebriformis (basionym Sebdenia cerebriformis), was included in the new genus based on molecular analyses and morphological similarities with Rhytimenia maculata but differing in the presence of multiple marginal cartilaginous holdfasts.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Willem Prud'homme van Reine (L) for advice regarding the type collection of Kallymenia maculata and providing the photographs, Paul Gabrielson for the unpublished sequence of Leniea, Mike Wynne for providing rare literature and translations thereof, and Jacob John for the diatom identification. JMH thanks the Australian Biological Resources Study (ABRS) for support and the Western Australian Museum for the invitation to participate in the Ashmore Reef survey (with financial support from Woodside Energy). GWS was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the New Brunswick Innovation Foundation, and ABRS. LLG sincerely thanks Claude Payri from Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD) for inviting her to the CORALCAP expedition, which took place at Bourail-Le Cap Goulvain in October 2007.

SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

Supplementary data associated with this article can be found online at http://dx.doi.org/10.2216/15-130.1.s1

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