Caulerpa sertularioides (S.G. Gmelin) M.A. Howe 1905:576

Fernández-García, Cindy, Wysor, Brian, Riosmena-Rodríguez, Rafael, Salamanca, Enrique Peña- & Verbruggen, Heroen, 2016, DNA-assisted identification of Caulerpa (Caulerpaceae, Chlorophyta) reduces species richness estimates for the Eastern Tropical Pacific, Phytotaxa 252 (3), pp. 185-204 : 196-198

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.252.3.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13676201

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E087E9-FFFF-573D-FF5E-A407FB6832BB

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Caulerpa sertularioides (S.G. Gmelin) M.A. Howe 1905:576
status

 

Caulerpa sertularioides (S.G. Gmelin) M.A. Howe 1905:576 ( Figure 7 C,D View FIGURE 7 )

Type Locality: −“in coralliis americanis”, possibly tropical Atlantic America.

Description: −Erect, light green thallus. Feather like assimilators, with a central rachis, generally unbranched, (0.2–) 1.5–1.6 (–5.8) cm high, (1.2–) 4.9–5.2 (–11.0) mm wide, but showing a reduction of the frond size in intertidal environments. Distichous subopposite rows of filiform ramuli that arise at acute angles and curve toward the apices. Stolons spreading, creeping (0.3–) 0.8–0.9 (–3.0) mm diameter, with highly branched rhizoids in sandy bottoms.

Habitat: −attached to rock and other hard substrata such as, dead and live coral and coral rubble, sandy bottoms, intertidal to 23 m deep, more common between 4– 7 m. In intertidal, can be growing on rocks with medium-energy wave action. In Colombia, patches of this species have been found in estuaries.

Distribution in the ETP: − Mexico: Nayarit, Colima, Guerrero, Oaxaca, Nicaragua: Chinandega, Costa Rica: Guanacaste, Isla del Caño, Panama: Golfo de Chiriquí, Golfo de Panama, Colombia: Bahía Málaga (Chocó), Nariño. This study confirmed the wide latitudinal distribution of C. sertularioides ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ) not only along the ETP, but also inside the Gulf of California, Mexico. This species is associated with rocky shores and subtidal environments, but mainlycovers sandy bottoms ( Fernández-García et al. 2012).

References: − Taylor 1945, Dawson 1962a, Dawson 1962b, Earle 1972, Soto 1983 Glynn & Maté 1997, Wysor 2004, Fernández & Cortés 2005, Bezy et al. 2006, Fernández 2007, Fernández & Alvarado 2008, Fernández & Cortés 2009, Smith et al. 2010, Fernández-García et al. 2011, Littler & Littler 2010.

Other remarks: In Costa Rica ( Fernández & Cortés 2005) and Panama ( Glynn & Maté 1997, Smith et al. 2010) this species has exhibited seasonal bloom patterns. The alga has maintained high densities for periods of several years, covering up to 90% of the benthos in some regions ( Fernández-García et al. 2012). In the Mexican tropical Pacific, Pedroche et al. (2005) have reported the forms: C. sertularioides f. brevipes (Colima and Oaxaca states) and C. sertularioides f. longiseta (Oaxaca state), which according to Fernández-García et al. (2012) may represent morphological adaptations to variable substrata and/or depth ranges. On shallow and rocky depths assimilators tended to be smaller and or even absent and the stolons were thicker. At greater depths and in finer sediments, assimilators are longer and stolons were thinner with more branched rhizoids ( Fernández-García et al. 2012).

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Chlorophyta

Class

Ulvophyceae

Order

Bryopsidales

Family

Caulerpaceae

Genus

Caulerpa

Loc

Caulerpa sertularioides (S.G. Gmelin) M.A. Howe 1905:576

Fernández-García, Cindy, Wysor, Brian, Riosmena-Rodríguez, Rafael, Salamanca, Enrique Peña- & Verbruggen, Heroen 2016
2016
Loc

Caulerpa sertularioides (S.G. Gmelin) M.A. Howe 1905:576

Howe, M. A. 1905: 576
1905
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