Ceramium secundatum

Ceramium secundatum
Scientific classification
(unranked): Archaeplastida
Division: Rhodophyta
Class: Florideophyceae
Order: Ceramiales
Family: Ceramiaceae
Genus: Ceramium
Species:
C. secundatum
Binomial name
Ceramium secundatum

Ceramium secundatum is a small marine red alga.

Description

This species is cylindrical and fundamentally monosiphonous.[1] It appears as tufts of erect axes to 14 cm long, densely branched attached by multicellular rhizoids. The main axes has strongly in-rolled apices. Although completely corticated it may appear banded when young. It does not show spines. The cortical cells develop from the nodes between the axial cells. Adventitious branches are abundant.[2]

Reproduction

The species is dioecious. Tetraspores occur in whorls on the young axes.[2][3] Found epiphytic on other algae and on artificial material in the sublittoral to 11m deep.[2]

Distribution

Recorded from the Great Britain and Ireland.[2]

Habitat

Common in the littoral,[4] and epiphytic on other algae and artificial material.[2]

References

  1. Jones, W.E. 1962. A key to the genera of the British Seaweeds. Field Studies Vol. 1 no. 4 pp 1 - 31
  2. Maggs, C.A. and Hommersand, M.H. 1993. Seaweeds of the British Isles Volume 1 Rhodophyta Part 3A Ceramiales. The Natural History Museum, London. ISBN 0-11-310045-0
  3. Newton, L. 1931. A Handbook of the British Seaweeds. London
  4. Bunker,F.StP.D. Maggs, C.A., Brodie,J.A. Bunker,A.R. 2017, Seaweeds of Britain and Ireland Second Edition, Wild Nature Press, Plymouth, UK ISBN 978-0-9955673-3-7
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.