Hidden in plain sight: Lindauera gen. nov.: a new genus of Dictyotales from New Zealand
Author
Nelson, Wendy A.
Author
Sutherland, Judy E.
text
Australian Systematic Botany
2023
2023-04-26
36
2
157
166
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb22032
journal article
295724
10.1071/SB22032
0780e3f5-9879-4287-8439-1c2f804ac0f4
1446-5701
11121984
Lindauera papenfussii
(Lindauer) W.A.
Nelson
&
J.E.Sutherl.
, comb. nov.
(
Fig. 1
.)
Dictyota papenfussii
Lindauer
,
Trans. & Proc. Roy. Soc.
New Zealand
77: 390, p. 38: fig. 1–3; p. 39: fig. 17 (1949).
Type
:
New Zealand
,
North Island
,
South
Taranaki
,
Pihama
,
Campbell’s beach
,
25 Feb. 1944
,
V.W.Lindauer
4110 (
holo
:
AK
(
AK295737
);
iso
: distributed as specimen number 187, in Fascicle VIII, of the Algae Nova-Zelandicae Exsiccatae (
Nelson and Phillips 1996
) e.g.
WELT
A000987
,
A020630
)
.
Fronds, erect, flat,
2–4 mm
wide, (3)7–15(20) cm in height; lower axes mid- to dark brown, upper axes golden brown. Axes frequently spirally twisted, narrowing upwards, with subdichotomous-pinnately decompound alternate branches. Apices vary in shape from pointed (
Fig. 5
a
) to rounded (
Fig. 5
b
). Basal axes stupose. Attached to solid substrates by primary, prostrate dichotomously branched axes, up to
2 cm
long (
Fig. 6
a
,
b
), arising directly from the lower main axis. Thalli with 3 cell layers – a single medullary layer of large rectangular cells, and a unilayered cortex of small cuboidal cells on each surface. Sporangia, large, solitary, scattered on upper part of thallus on both surfaces, with single sporangial stalk cell. Oogonia and antheridia infrequently seen.
Illustrations
N. M. Adams,
Seaweeds of
New Zealand
105 (1994); W. A.
Nelson
,
New Zealand
Seaweeds
61 (2020).
Fig. 5. Specimens showing morphological variation present in
Lindauera papenfussii
. (
a
) WELT A026094, Doubtful Sound, Fiordland; (
b
) WELT A032190, Te Miko Reef, Bay of Islands.
Specimens examined
NEW ZEALAND
:
Manawatāwhi
/
Three Kings Islands
: Princes Islands, Rosemary Island, Cattons Cave,
13 Apr. 2013
,
R
.
D’Archino
, AK384069.
North Island
:
Bay of Islands
,
Deep Water Cove
,
30 Nov. 2009
,
R
.
D’Archino
,
WELT
A030593
;
Bay of Islands Te Miko Reef
,
10 Feb. 2010
,
S.Miller
&
R
.
D’Archino
,
WELT
A032190
;
Bay of Islands
,
Te Miko Reef
,
11 Feb. 2010
,
R
.
Stewart
&
B.Crocker
,
WELT
A032191
;
Cavalli islands
,
Motokawanui
,
9 Apr. 2013
,
R
.
D’Archino, AK
384068.
South Island
:
Marlborough
Sounds
,
Queen Charlotte Sound
mouth,
White Rocks
,
20 Nov. 2008
,
R
.
D’Archino
,
WELT
A034492
;
Queen Charlotte Sound
mouth,
D’Urville
I.,
27 Mar. 2017
, beam trawl,
WELT
A034505
;
Arnott Point
, 10
Dec.
200,
N.Shears
,
WELT
A026837
;
Fiordland
,
Doubtful Sound
,
Secretary Island
,
22 Jan. 2000
,
C.Duffy
,
WELT
A026094
;
Shelter Islands
,
27 Jan. 2008
,
F.Thomas
,
C.Hepburn
, &
D.Richards
,
WELT
A034491
;
Fiordland
,
Breaksea Sound
,
19 Dec. 2019
,
R
.
D’Archino
,
WELT
A034502
;
Fiordland
,
Dusky Sound
,
Five-Fingers Peninsula
,
14 Nov. 1984
,
P.Brotherson
,
WELT
A016265
.
Rakiura
/
Stewart Island
:
Port Pegasus
,
Hell’s Gates
,
4 Mar. 2009
,
C.Hepburn
, AK384065;
Port Pegasus
,
Pearl Island
outer,
6 Mar. 2009
,
R
.
D’Archino, AK
384067, and
Pearl Island
,
3 Dec. 2018
,
M.Desmond
&
A.Kluibenschedl
,
WELT
A034498
.
Fig. 6. Attachment to shells with prostrate axes (
a
,
b
). WELT A032191.
Distribution
On the basis of the results of phylogenetic analyses and examination of herbarium specimens, the distribution of
Lindauera papenfussii
is now understood to extend in
New Zealand
from Manawatāwhi/Three Kings Islands, and the northern North Island through to the southern South Island (particularly Fiordland), and Stewart Island (
Fig. 2
), and in
Australia
it has been found in both
New South Wales
and
South Australia
.
Habitat and ecology
Lindauera papenfussii
is found from the upper subtidal zone through to depths of at least
20 m
, usually in areas of moderate exposure. It is found growing on rocky reefs as well as on stable shell hash and cobbles. It can be locally abundant, forming dense patches.
Phenology
Specimens have been collected throughout the year, with fertile material recorded from November through to February (late spring through summer).
Conservation status
Nelson
et al
. (2019)
categorised
Dictyota papenfussii
as ‘data deficient’ on the basis of the information available at the time of assessment.
Notes
The morphology of
L. papenfussii
is quite variable, having pointed to rounded tips, and in the height that thalli attain. In northern areas, thalli are typically smaller than those found in the south and generally have more rounded and diverging apices than specimens collected from
Taranaki
south.