Plocamium pusillum Sonder, 1845
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/cryptogamie-algologie2021v42a14 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7819295 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2F0B5933-6E14-301B-1509-F9C7E39FFE65 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Plocamium pusillum Sonder |
status |
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Botanische Zeitung 3: 54 ( Sonder 1845).
TYPE LOCALITY. — ad oras occidentales Novae Hollandiae. The type specimen was epiphytic on a stem of Amphibolis .
LECTOTYPE (here designated). — MEL 1005815 View Materials ( Fig.2 View FIG ). Note: Sonder (1845) did not cite a specific specimen, but later (1846) gave ‘ Herb. Preiss No. 2613’. This number does not appear on MEL 1005815 View Materials , which may suggest the existence of additional specimens in other herbaria. However, since we are unaware of any further specimens, we herein lectotypify the species with the single MEL specimen.
SPECIMENS EXAMINED (DNA sequence vouchers). — Western Australia, First Rock, S of Penguin Island, Shoalwater Marine Park, 15.II.2011, J.Huisman 15.2.11.1.16 (PERTH 08715351); Cape (Point) Peron, W.A., 3 m depth on algae, G.W.Saunders & K.Dixon (UNB, GWS025286); New South Wales: Yellow Rock, Lord Howe Island, from 15 m depth on rock, G.W.Saunders (UNB, GWS002025); Victoria: The Springs, Point Lonsdale, 4 m depth on rock, G.W.Saunders & L.Kraft (UNB, GWS016698); Norfolk Island, 1 m depth on rock, G.W.Saunders & K.Dixon (UNB, GWS029289).
ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED (unsequenced, based on morphology). — Western Australia, Cape Peron, epilithic, 25.II.2021, J.M.Huisman (PERTH 09316647); Eglinton Rocks, 17.V.1996, J.Huisman JH 665 (PERTH 06546757); Burns Beach, drift, 2.IX.1985, R.D.Royce 2562 (PERTH 05163587); Cottesloe, drift, 12.VI.1951, R.D.Royce 1062 (PERTH 04017765); Capel Beach, on rocks between tides, 17.IX.1949, R.D.Royce 368 (PERTH 04017862); Point [Cape] Peron, epiphytic, 28.V.1949, R.D.Royce s.n. (PERTH 04017870); Mushroom Rock, Thomson Bay, Rottnest Island, 16.X.1934, A.Nash s.n. (PERTH 04017838).
DISTRIBUTION. — Based on molecular analyses, this species is widely distributed and known from southern Western Australia, Victoria, and New South Wales (Lord Howe Island) and Norfolk Island.
HABIT. — Thallus ( Fig. 3A View FIG ) dark red, to 6 cm tall, much branched, attached by a hapteroid holdfast to seagrasses, algae or epilithic (occasionally sand-binding). Primary axes typically sinuous, with lateral branches borne mostly in series of 3 ( Fig. 3B View FIG ), but occasionally in pairs. Lateral branches only slightly more slender than primary axes, therefore often indistinguishable. Lowermost branch in each series simple, straight or curved upwardly, linear with a pointed apex. Axes initially flattened, 250-300 µm broad, 50-100 µm thick ( Fig. 3C View FIG ) but becoming compressed to subterete towards the base, c. 600 µm broad, 400 µm thick ( Fig. 3D View FIG ). Structure pseudoparenchymatous, with large hyaline medullary cells grading abruptly to a cortex of 1-2 cell layers ( Fig. 3C, D View FIG ). Cortical cells with several ovoid to ellipsoid parietal plastids and a spherical central refringent vacuole, the latter only visible in living material ( Fig. 3E View FIG ).
REPRODUCTION. — Tetrasporangia are borne in fertile distal segments of upper branches ( Fig. 3F View FIG ), the branches initially simple but eventually dividing and becoming glomerulate. Fertile segments only slightly distended.Tetrasporangia biseriate ( Fig. 3G View FIG ), zonately divided, ovoid/ellipsoidal, 50-60 µm long, 35-45 µm diam. Other reproductive structures not observed.
MEL |
Museo Entomologico de Leon |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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