Abstract

The marine green alga Caulerpa bikinensis W. R. Taylor was described as a new species in 1950 from dredged specimens (37–57 m depth) from Bikini Atoll and Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands. Its relative rareness in collections from waters less than 30 m deep from these atolls indicated that it favored the mesophotic coral ecosystem (MCE) at depths of 30–150 m. Published and unpublished records of this species over the past 70 years show its habitat preference on the seaward slopes of atolls and in lagoons. Observations were based on collections from Pacific atolls of the Marshall Islands, Tuamotu Islands, Chuuk State in the Federated States of Micronesia, Cook Islands, and Johnston Atoll, and on the deep lagoonal reefs of Palau. Caulerpa bikinensis has also been recorded in shallow waters 1 m deep in dark microcavities on lagoonal pinnacles at Takapoto Atoll (Tuamotu Islands) and in Chuuk Lagoon, and 2 m deep at Raroia Atoll (Tuamotu Islands). Caulerpa bikinensis favors the deeper depths of the MCE for its low light intensity rather than its cooler temperature, and definitely shows a strong affinity to the high energy seaward slopes of calcareous Pacific atolls.

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