Pacific Seaweeds. Louis Druehl

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Pacific Seaweeds - Louis Druehl

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Order Cladophorales Family Cladophoraceae

      Number of Species

      Chaetomorpha (Greek=bristle hair) is a complex tangle of species that require investigation; currently, there are eight species listed in our area.

      Description

      Chaetomorpha grows as a single chain of cylindrical to barrel-shaped cells resembling a string of emerald beads under a good hand lens. The filaments may reach 20 cm (8 in) in length but are typically shorter. Plants may be found

      Chaetomorpha sp.

      52 | Filaments

      Pacific Seaweeds

      as tangled masses floating unattached, as clumps of upright filaments, or they may appear as single wayward strands sticking out among other algae.

      Habitat & Distribution

      Chaetomorpha can be found in tide pools and mud flats in protected to semi-exposed waters in the mid- to lower intertidal region, from Alaska to central California.

      Rhizoclonium Green fish line

      Above: Rhizoclonium lubricum filaments tangled in estuary grasses.

      Right: Rhizoclonium lubricum filaments, reminiscent of green fishing line.

      Green Seaweeds | 53

      Identifying Pacific Seaweeds

      Class Siphonocladophyceae Order Cladophorales Family Cladophoraceae

      Number of Species

      Rhizoclonium (Greek=root) contains 30 species and forms. Locally, this genus is represented by one species, R. lubricum; however, the distinction between Rhizoclonium and other unbranched green filaments, like Chae-tomorpha, is ripe for study. This species was formerly known by the more suggestive name Lola lubrica.

      Description

      Rhizoclonium lubricum is an unbranched and usually unattached filament. Its multinucleate cells are invisible to the naked eye and its overall look and feel are reminiscent of green fishing line. Plants are usually in excess of 20 cm (8 in) long.

      Habitat & Distribution

      Rhizoclonium lubricum is often found in wave-sheltered waters, entangled with other attached seaweeds in the mid- to lower intertidal region, from BC to central California.

      Urospora Hanic’s green barrels

      Urospora sp. Photo by Gary Saunders

      54 | Filaments

      Pacific Seaweeds

      Class Ulvophyceae Order Ulotrichales Family Ulotrichaceae

      Number of Species

      Urospora (Greek=tailed spore, named after a microscopic stage in the life cycle) is represented locally by four species: U. wormskioldii, U. penicilli-formis, U. neglecta and U. doliifera.

      Description

      Urospora is an attached, unbranched filament composed of large bar-rel-shaped cells, visible to the naked eye (but a magnifying glass helps). The filaments may reach 30 cm (12 in) in length but are usually less than 10 cm (4 in) long.

      Locally, Louis Hanic (professor emeritus, University of Prince Edward Island) was able to link ‘Codiolum’, a microscopic bowling pin–shaped unicellular green alga that lives inside fleshy red algae, to the life cycle of Urospora (see Unicellular Forms, p. 70). Previously, ‘Codiolum’ was classified in a distant and distinct group of green algae. This discovery was the culmination of four years of graduate research (University of British Columbia, 1965) by a former antique furniture restorer from Secovce, Czechoslovakia.

      Habitat & Distribution

      Urospora grows on rock and wood in the mid- to high intertidal region from Alaska to southern California. Its discovery would enrich collectors’ life lists.

      Urospora penicilliformis. At right is detail of cell shape.

      Green Seaweeds | 55

      Identifying Pacific Seaweeds

      Branched Filaments

      Acrosiphonia Green rope

      Class Ulvophyceae Order Ulotrichales Family Ulotrichaceae

      Number of Species

      Of the 13 Acrosiphonia (Greek=tube-topped) species worldwide, three species are found in our area: A. duriuscula, A. coalita and A. arcta.

      Description

      Typically, the attached and branched plants form rope-like strands that result from hooked branches tangling the thread-like filaments together. Often these hooked filaments can be seen with the aid of a magnifying glass. More conspicuous forms may reach 40 cm (16 in) in length. This group of multi-nucleate plants (many nuclei per cell) has been associated with a ‘Codiolum’-like phase (see Urospora, p. 53).

      Habitat & Distribution

      Plants

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