Charophytes of Australia’s Northern Territory - I. Tribe Chareae
Author
Casanova, Michelle T.
Author
Karol, Kenneth G.
text
Australian Systematic Botany
2023
2023-03-30
36
1
38
79
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb22023
journal article
10.1071/SB22023
1446-5701
10904227
Chara submollusca
Nordstedt
,
Hedwigia
27: 189 (1888)
Type
:
QUEENSLAND
:
Rockinghams Bay
,
s.d.
,
J.Dallachy
s.n.
(
lecto
:
LD
!;
isolecto
:
BM
!,
fide
R.D.Wood in R.D.Wood & K.Imahori (eds),
Rev.
Characeae
1: 316–317 (1965))
.
Dioecious.
Plants
up to
250 mm
high, not much branched, elongate and flexible, not calcified (
Fig. 20
a
,
b
).
Axes
200–555 µm in diameter, irregularly 1× corticated (
Fig. 20
i
).
Internodes
9–36 mm
long.
Spine cells
solitary, small, conical with an acute tip, up to 120 µm high,
stipulodes
in 1 row, 2× the number of branchlets (
Fig. 20
d
),
0.4–1.5 mm
long, small and conical.
Branchlets
7–10 in
a whorl, ecorticate (
Fig.
20
g
), 3 or 4 cells long,
basal branchlet cell
long,
branchlet end segment
usually a single cell with some smaller subtending bract cells, sometimes 2 or 3 equally long cells,
bract cells
2–6 (
Fig. 20
e
,
f
), unilateral, internally up to
0.6 mm
long, externally small, conical, frequently absent.
Bracteoles
2,
1 mm
long,
bractlet
present in place of an antheridium on oosporangial plants.
Gametangia
on separate plants, solitary at the lowest 2 or 3 branchlet nodes (
Fig. 20
c
).
Oosporangia
up to 750 µm long, 405–450 μm wide,
coronula
short.
Oospores
360–570 µm long, 290–350 µm wide, with 8 or 9 striae of prominent ridges (
Fig. 20
j
), the oospore wall appearing smooth, somewhat granulate to roughened at high magnification (
Fig. 20
k
), basal-cell impression up to 88 µm in diameter (
Fig. 20
l
).
Antheridia
up to 600 µm in diameter.
Chromosomes
not known. Vegetative reproductive organs (bulbils) often present at the apices of the branches (
Fig. 20
h
), consisting of shortened shoots with starchfilled basal branchlet segments.
Distribution
Tropical north and eastern
Australia
in shallow freshwater waterbodies, rivers and ponds.
Etymology
From Latin ‘
sub
’ meaning somewhat, and ‘
mollis
’ meaning soft or flexible.
Notes
Chara submollusca
was described as a species by Nordstedt (1888) and included in
C
.
section
Agardhia
by
Wood (1962)
. However, when Wood examined the Australian charophyte flora he amalgamated
C. submollusca
with
Chara fibrosa
var.
fibrosa
(
Wood 1971
)
.
Chara submollusca
is characterised by dioecy, haplostichous cortex and very long primary branchlet segments. The presence of specialised opaque branch apices (with starchfilled branchlet segments) is distinctive in this tropical species.
Specimens examined
NORTHERN TERRITORY
:
Manton Dam Recreation Area
,
5 Sep. 2010
,
M
.
T
.
Casanova
r756 (
MEL
,
NY
); roadside borrow-pit on the
Arnhemland Highway
,
8 Sep. 2010
,
M
.
T
.
Casanova
r786 (
MEL
,
NY
);
Darwin River
Dam,
22 Apr. 1977
,
J
.
Must
1467 (DNA);
Jabiru Lake
,
Jabiru
,
27 Aug. 1983
,
I
.
Cowie
s.n. (DNA);
Cathedral Billabong
,
Arnhemland
,
29 July 1983
,
I
.D.Cowie s.n.
(DNA).
QUEENSLAND
:
Barrow River
, 1891,
G
.
Podenzana
s.n. (
BM
);
Browns Creek
,
Pascoe River
,
13 July 1948
,
L
.
J
.
Brass
19560 (
BM
,
L
)
.