Jania (Corallinales, Rhodophyta) in southern Australia

1994 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 605 ◽  
Author(s):  
HW Johansen ◽  
HBS Womersley

The coralline algal genus Jania Lamouroux (tribe Janieae, subfamily Corallinoideae, family Corallinaceae) contains six species on southern Australian coasts: J. micrarthrodia Lamouroux, J. pulchella (Harvey) comb. nov., J. pusilla (Sonder) Yendo, J. verrucosa Lamouroux, and two new species, J. minuta and J. parva. These species are segregated primarily on vegetative characters pertaining to fronds, intergenicula, branching, medullary organisation, and substrate preference, with reproductive features used in some cases. Four of the species are, as far as known, endemic to southern Australia: J. minuta, J. pawa, J. pulchella, and J. pusilla. Jania minuta and J. rnicrarthrodia have evolved a unique short-segmented morphology, with intergenicula containing only one or two tiers of medullary cells each. Jania micrarthrodia is a common and conspicuous epiphyte and variable in morphology depending on degree of water movement. In J. minuta, tetrasporangia are replaced by unusual sporangia, each comprised of a large two-nucleate cell, bracketed by small, uninucleate apical and basal cells. This species also forms distinctive multicellular propagules. Jania parva has delicate fronds with dichotomies that tend to diverge widely; only bisporangial and gametangial plants have been found. Jania pulchella has two types of intergenicula, 'janioid' intergenicula which in fertile plants contain conceptacles, and basal compressed and lobed 'cheilosporoid' intergenicula; it is transferred from Cheilosporum pulchellum Harvey. Jania pusilla is usually epiphytic on Cystophora spp., and has small fronds with broad intergenicula. Jania verrucosa, the most robust species, forms dense tufts on low intertidal rocks in southern Australia and in other subtropical or temperate regions.

2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 1542-1556
Author(s):  
Showe‐Mei Lin ◽  
Olivier De Clerck ◽  
Frederik Leliaert ◽  
Ya‐Chu Chuang

Phytotaxa ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 268 (2) ◽  
pp. 123 ◽  
Author(s):  
FABIO NAUER ◽  
VALÉRIA CASSANO ◽  
MARIANA C. OLIVEIRA

Two new species of the red algal genus Hypnea (Gigartinales) are described for the southeastern coast of Brazil based on three molecular markers (COI-5P, rbcL and UPA), detailed morphological analysis, and comparison with closely related species. These species were named H. wynnei Nauer, Cassano & M.C. Oliveira and H. yokoyana Nauer, Cassano & M.C. Oliveira. Hypnea wynnei is characterized primarily by its reduced size, sub-erect tufts with few lateral branches and entangled basal portion, a thallus that is flattened only at the apical portions, and tetrasporangial sori developed only at apical portions of the branchlets. Hypnea yokoyana is characterized by its larger thallus, profuse branching, entirely terete axes, larger diameter of the main axes, and lack of entangling at its base. The molecular data support the conclusion that H. wynnei and H. yokoyana are distinct from other Hypnea species and are distantly related to Hypnea from the Brazilian coast.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pushpendu Kundu ◽  
Felix Bast

Abstract We used three molecular markers (COI-5P, rbcL and UPA) to investigate the diversity of Hypnea spp., an economically important red algal genus, collected from India. Our concatenated tree (COI-5P and rbcL) supported the monophyly of two new species, Hypnea indica sp. nov. and Hypnea bullata sp. nov. H. indica diverged from its closest two sister species, Hypnea cervicornis and Hypnea tenuis (by 15.9 and 11.2%, respectively, in COI-5P; and 3.4 and 3.2% in rbcL). We describe H. indica as a new species characterised by an erect, percurrent main axis with spine-like branchlets in acute angles, straight and forked apices, axial cells surrounded by large periaxial cells or two cells similar in size to the axial cell, and the presence of lenticular thickening in the cross-section of the thallus. H. bullata diverged from its closest sister species, Hypnea brasiliensis (by 10.9% in COI-5P and 3.3% in rbcL). H. bullata is characterized by a prostrate thallus up to 1.5 cm in height, highly anastomosed, with an axial cell surrounded by similar sized, or smaller, periaxial cells, tetrasporangia present near the base of branchlets, and the presence of lenticular thickening.


2016 ◽  
Vol 59 (2-3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luz Elena Mateo-Cid ◽  
A. Catalina Mendoza-González ◽  
Abel Sentíes ◽  
Jhoana Díaz-Larrea ◽  
Deisy Y. García-López ◽  
...  

AbstractThe species diversity of the red algal genus


2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 340-348
Author(s):  
James Lucas da Costa-Lima ◽  
Earl Celestino de Oliveira Chagas

Abstract—A synopsis of Dicliptera (Acanthaceae) for Brazil is presented. Six species are recognized: Dicliptera ciliaris, D. sexangularis, and D. squarrosa, widely distributed in South America; D. purpurascens, which ranges from the North Region of Brazil (in the state of Acre) to eastern Bolivia; D. gracilirama, a new species from the Atlantic Forest of northeastern Brazil; and D. granchaquenha, a new species recorded in dry and semideciduous forests in Bolivia and western Brazil, in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul. Furthermore, we propose new synonyms and designate lectotypes for eleven names. An identification key to the six accepted Dicliptera species in Brazil is provided.


2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-84
Author(s):  
Llorenç Sáez ◽  
Javier López-Alvarado ◽  
Pere Fraga ◽  
Regina Berjano ◽  
M. Ángeles Ortiz ◽  
...  

Abstract—Two new diploid species, Aira minoricensis and Aira hercynica, are described and illustrated, along with chromosome counts, risk assessment, distribution and habitat, phenology, and comparisons with morphologically similar species. A comparative table and a key for the species of Aira for the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands are provided to assist in the identification of these overlooked species, and their relationships to other taxa are discussed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 355-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Didier Bert ◽  
Stéphane Bersac ◽  
Gérard Delanoy ◽  
Léon Canut

Abstract Bed-by-bed sampling of twelve Barremian sections in southeastern France from pelagic basin (Vocontian Basin) to neritic platforms (Arc of Castellane, Arc of Nice and Provencal Domain) has enabled the collection of isochronous samples of the ammonite genus Gassendiceras. Three poorly known species of the Toxancyloceras vandenheckei Zone (Upper Barremian) are revised: G. alpinum, G. multicostatum and G. hoheneggeri; two new species are described (G. rebouleti nov. sp. and G. bosellii nov. sp.). The intraspecific variability of particular species was recognised. This variability is between slender peramorphic and robust paedomorphic extreme morphologies, with the presence of all intermediates.


Author(s):  
L. V. Averyanov ◽  
Khang Sinh Nguyen ◽  
T. V. Maisak ◽  
Hiep Tien Nguyen ◽  
N. L. Orlov ◽  
...  

This paper continues the publication of new data obtained during field studies in remote and poorly studied regions of Laos in 2015–2018. It provides descriptions of two new species (Bulbophyllum brachyscapum Aver. and Sunipia saccata Aver.), emended descriptions of two previously published but insufficiently known species (Cleisostoma verrucosum Aver., Oberonia vesiculifera Aver.) and reports of eight species newly recorded in the flora of Laos (Biermannia calcarata Aver., Bulbophyllum farreri (W. W. Sm.) Seidenf., Didymoplexiella trichechus (J. J. Sm.) Garay, Eria eriopsidobulbon C. S. P. Parish et Rchb. fil., Habenaria ciliolaris Kraenzl., Liparis caudata Aver. et K. S. Nguyen, Odontochilus umbrosus (Aver.) Ormerod, and Porpax ustulata (C. S. P. Parish et Rchb. fil.) Rolfe). Appropriate citations of regional literature, colour illustrations, data on types and distribution, descriptions, etymology, as well as notes on taxonomy and related species are provided for the studied species.


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