A taxonomic account of species in the tribe Spongoclonieae (Ceramiaceae, Ceramiales, Rhodophyta) reported from Atlantic and Pacific Mexico
Author
Mateo-Cid, Luz Elena
Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Departamento de Botánica, Carpio y Plan de Ayala s / n. Col. Santo Tomas Delegación Miguel Hidalgo, Ciudad de México, 11340, México
lmateoc@ipn.mx
Author
Mendoza-González, A. Catalina
Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Departamento de Botánica, Carpio y Plan de Ayala s / n. Col. Santo Tomas Delegación Miguel Hidalgo, Ciudad de México, 11340, México
Author
Norris, James N.
Department of Botany, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 20013 - 7012, USA.
Author
García-López, Deisy Y.
Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Departamento de Botánica, Carpio y Plan de Ayala s / n. Col. Santo Tomas Delegación Miguel Hidalgo, Ciudad de México, 11340, México
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-02-27
340
3
229
245
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.340.3.3
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.340.3.3
1179-3163
13720321
Pleonosporium pygmaeum
N.L.
Gardner 1927: 379
, pl. 79: fig. 2, pl. 80 (
Figs. 22–25
)
Type
locality
: cast ashore; on seagrass,
Phyllospadix
;
La Jolla
,
San Diego County
,
California
,
USA
.
Distribution
. EASTERN PACIFIC.
California
,
USA
;
Baja California
,
México
; and
El Salvador
(
Dawson 1961
, Guiry and Guiry 2017; herein).
Specimens studied
.
PACIFIC
MÉXICO
:
Baja California
:
Punta Morro
(
116°39’45”W
,
31°51’41”N
), coll.
Mendoza-González
&
Mateo-Cid
,
31-07-1987
(
ENCB 9570
; polysporangia)
;
and, Raul´s, north of
Ensenada
(
116°39’34” W
,
31°51’36” N
), coll.
R
.
Aguilar Rosas
,
12-04-2000
(
CMMEX 3698
; polysporangia)
.
Habitat
. Epiphytic on
Osmundea spectabilis
(Postels & Ruprecht) K.W. Nam
; intertidal, in tide pools.
Morphology, Anatomy and Reproductive structures.
Thalli flaccid, soft pink,
1.5–2.5 cm
high, with percurrent axes, branching more or less alternate-distichously; upper main branches often longer than the lower ones; lower portions of thallus lightly corticated by slender, descending rhizoidal filaments; attached by numerous rhizoids. Primary axes 300–350 μm in diameter and 300–500 μm long; primary axes and branches of first and second orders corticated by slender, branched, descending rhizoidal filaments from the basal cell of lateral branches; ultimate indeterminate branchlets 30–40 μm in diameter at the base, upward becoming tapered and adaxially curved, with blunt apices.
FIGURES 17–24.
Species of
Pleonosporium
:
Pleonosporium mexicanum
,
17) Apical portion of a sporophyte with incurved branchlets. Scale bar: 600 μm. 18) Sessile mature polysporangium (arrows), and an immature polysporangium (arrowhead). Scale bar: 65 μm. 19) Sessile spermatangial cluster (arrow). Scale bar: 40 μm. 20) Young procarp (arrow); note that the trichogyne has not developed. Scale bar: 50 μm. 21) Mature carposporophyte (key), note the carposporangia (arrow) and mature carposporophyte (arrowheads). Scale bar: 130 μm.
Pleonosporium pygmaeum,
Punta Morro
, Baja California (
ENCB 9570
). 22) Habit of sporophyte. Scale bar: 8 mm. 23) Basal portion of thallus showing strong rhizoidal cortication (arrow). Scale bar: 160 μm. 24) Branch tip of sporophyte with straight branchlets. Scale bar: 120 μm.
Polysporangia spherical, 60–70 μm in diameter (including thick hyaline cell wall), divided into 32 spores; borne adaxial on simple third-order branchlets. Gametangial plants not observed.
Remarks
. Uncertain if
Pleonosporium pygmaeum
should be recognized as a distinct species,
Dawson (1962a:42)
observed material from Cortes Bank,
California
Channel Islands (
EYD-8010
) in agreement with
P. pygmaeum
N.L.
Gardner (1927)
. He noted the species could be characterized by its small size, 0.6–2.0 cm, and the corticating filaments restricted to its lowermost base. Although
Dawson (1962a)
also suggested it could be a dwarfish, little corticated, variant of
P. dasyoides
(J. Agardh) De Toni
, he did not treat it as a synonym. Later,
Abbott (1972)
considered both
P. pygmaeum
and
P. dasyoides
as being conspecific with
P. squarrulosum
(Harvey) I.A. Abbott.
Our Mexican specimens are much smaller than of
P. dasyoides
as reported from Pacific
Baja California
, i.e.,
5–10 cm
tall (
Dawson, 1962a
) and
5–20 cm
tall from
California
(
Abbott and Hollenberg,1976
). We tentatively refer our Mexican specimen to
P. pygmaeum
, pending phylogenetic analyses to test its taxonomic status and verify its presence in Pacific
Mexico
.