Abstract

J. Afonso-Carrillo, C. Rodríguez-Prieto, F. Boisset, C. Sobrino, I. Tittley and A.I. Neto. 2006. Botryocladia chiajeana and Botryocladia macaronesica sp. nov. (Rhodymeniaceae, Rhodophyta) from the Mediterranean and the eastern Atlantic, with a discussion on the closely related genus Irvinea. Phycologia 45: 277–292. DOI: 10.2216/04-97.1Specimens from the eastern Atlantic, Mediterranean and Adriatic seas previously reported as Botryocladia chiajeana showed differences in morphology, and re-examination of Meneghini's original collection of Chrysymenia chiajeana (basionym B. chiajeana) revealed that only the Mediterranean and Adriatic specimens are in agreement with the original protologue, whereas plants reported from the eastern Atlantic are recognised here as Botryocladia macaronesica Afonso-Carrillo, Sobrino, Tittley & Neto sp. nov. The vegetative and reproductive morphology of western Mediterranean plants is examined in detail for the first time, and B. chiajeana is characterised by the following combination of features: solid axes bearing frequently dichotomously branched vesicles, vesicle walls three layered, outer cortical cells arranged in rosettes, secretory cells borne on modified medullary cells, spermatangia cut off from scattered spermatangial mother cells, cystocarps strongly protuberant and tetrasporangia cruciately divided and exposed on the outer cortical layer at maturity. From the Meneghini collection, a lectotype specimen of C. chiajeana was selected. Botryocladia macaronesica, known so far only from the islands of Azores, Madeira, Canaries and Cape Verde, differs from other Botryocladia species by a unique combination of significant attributes including elongate saccate vesicles, near-continuous cortication of vesicle walls, secretory cells on unmodified medullary cells and completely immersed cystocarps. An analysis of the morphological characters currently used for separating Botryocladia from related genera (i.e. Chrysymenia, Gloiosaccion and Irvinea), showed that there is considerable overlap between Botryocladia and Irvinea. These genera are presently discriminated mostly by molecular evidence as the supposed morphological characters are shown here to vary considerably within the genus Botryocladia.

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