New records of benthic marine algae from the Canary Islands (eastern Atlantic Ocean): morphology, taxonomy and distribution
Fecha
2007Resumen
Four species of marine algae are reported from the Canary Islands for the first time. Our report of the western
Atlantic Gelidiella setacea (Gelidiales, Rhodophyta) is the
first from the eastern Atlantic Ocean. Pseudotetraspora
marina (Tetrasporales, Chlorophyta) previously known on
the eastern side of the Atlantic Ocean from temperate
saltmarshes only, is now reported growing in the shallow
sublittoral zone, the habitat in which tropical western
Atlantic populations also occur. The presence of Lomentaria chylocladiella (Rhodymeniales, Rhodophyta) represents the first report in the Atlantic Ocean of a species
previously thought to be endemic to the Mediterranean
Sea. The record of the widely distributed Acrochaetium
hallandicum (Acrochaetiales, Rhodophyta) was not unexpected. Specimens of A. hallandicum have vegetative
cells with a single lobate parietal chloroplast with a single
pyrenoid, a feature that among acrochaetioid algae
occurs exclusive in the genus Colaconema (Colaconematales), and consequently the species is transferred to
this genus. Fertile sporophytes are described for Gelidiella setacea, a species previously known only in its vegetative condition. Cruciately to irregularly divided
sporangia are regularly arranged in transverse rows in stichidia laterally formed on the axes. The species is transferred to the genus Parviphycus on the basis of the
morphology of the stichidia and the distichous pattern of
apical division exhibited by the axes, both exclusive features of this genus.