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Articles

Three species of Mastophora (Rhodophyta: Corallinales, Corallinaceae) in the tropical Indo-Pacific Ocean: M. rosea (C. Agardh) Setchell, M. pacifica (Heydrich) Foslie, and M. multistrata sp. nov.

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Pages 404-422 | Received 16 Dec 2008, Accepted 12 Mar 2009, Published online: 22 Apr 2019
 

Abstract

Keats D.W., Maneveldt G.W., Baba M., Chamberlain Y.M. and Lewis J.E. 2009. Three species of Mastophora (Rhodophyta: Corallinales, Corallinaceae) in the tropical Indo-Pacific Ocean: M. rosea (C. Agardh) Setchell, M. pacifica (Heydrich) Foslie, and M. multistrata, sp. nov. Phycologia 48: 404–422. DOI: 10.2216/08-101.1.

Three species of Mastophora (Corallinaceae, Corallinales, Rhodophyta) were found in extensive studies of non-geniculate coralline algae in various areas of the tropical Indo-Pacific, including French Polynesia, Fiji, Ryukyu Islands (Japan), and Taiwan. Two species are delicate and leafy but are distinguishable on morphological grounds. Mastophora rosea plants are taeniform, dichotomously branched, and weakly calcified and have rolled margins. Their thalli show very little secondary growth, with only occasional small round patches at the surface. Tetrasporangial and carposporangial conceptacles are very high (330–640 μm) and dome-shaped to almost spherical. Mastophora rosea plants collected during this study stand out in the water because of their bluish-purple colour. Mastophora pacifica has more strongly calcified thalli that are irregularly branched, with abundant secondary growth and the development of loosely attached, crispy layers. Tetrasporangial and carposporangial conceptacles are conical (280–550 μm high). Thallus colour in M. pacifica varies substantially depending on where it is growing, ranging from violet brown to dark red to greyish ruby, but are mostly pale-pink to reddish-purple in their submerged living state. Mastophora multistrata sp. nov. plants are hard and robust. Their thalli are made up of tightly packed layers that are evident only in section. Tetrasporangial conceptacles are generally low (315–490 μm high) and dome-shaped. In their living state, M. multistrata plants are usually deep-purple plum coloured.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank the University of the Western Cape (UWC) for providing funding and research equipment and the South African National Research Foundation (NRF) and the SA Department of Environmental Affairs & Tourism (DEAT) for research grants to D.W.K. and G.W.M. We thank Anne Ballou, Dennis Goulet, Mark Knight, Jacson Ng, Wei-Lung Wang, and Gary Yeo for help with diving. Thanks are due to G. Robin South, Seremaia Tuqiri, and the International Ocean Institute (IOI) for facilitating the visit of D.W.K. to the University of the South Pacific as an International Ocean Institute scholar. We acknowledge the National Taiwan Ocean University (NTOU) for funds to allow the visit of D.W.K. and G.W.M. to NTOU and Claude Payri and the Laboratoire d'Ecologie Marine, Université Française du Pacific, for funding the visit of D.W.K. and Y.M.C. to French Polynesia and for warm hospitality. We thank B. van Zyl Smit for rendering the Latin translation of the diagnosis.

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