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Polysiphonia



Polysiphonia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Protista
Phylum: Rhodophyta
Class: Florideophyceae
Order: Ceramiales
Family: Rhodomelaceae
Genus: Polysiphonia
Greville

Polysiphonia is a genus of red algae with about 19 species on the coasts of the British Isles. [1] and about 200 species world-wide, including Antarctica and Greenland. [2][3] It is in the Order Ceramiales and Family Rhodomelaceae [4].

Contents

Description

Polysiphonia is a red alga, filamentous and usually well branched some plants reaching a length of about 30 cm. They are attached by rhizoids or haptera [3] to a rocky surface or other alga. The thallus (tissue) consists of fine branched filaments each with a central axial filament supporting pericentral cells. The number of these pericentral cells, 4–24, is used in identification. [5][6][7] Polysiphonia elongata [8] shows a central axial cell with 4 periaxial cells with cortical cells growing over the outside on the older fronds. [1]

Features used in identification include the number of pericentral cells, the cortication of main branches, constriction of young branches at their base, whether the branching dichotomous or spiral, and the width and length of thalli.

Distribution and ecology

Species have been recorded from Europe, Australia and New Zealand, North America and South America, islands in the Pacific Ocean, South Africa, southwest Asia, Japan, Greenland and Antarctica [2].

The species are entirely marine, found growing on rock, other algae, mussels or limpets and artifical substrata etc from mid-littoral to at least 27 m depth. Many species are abundant in rock pools [1]. Polysiphonia lanosa is commonly found growing on Ascophyllum nodosum [9].

Life cycle

The life-cycle of the red algae has three stages (triphasic). In Polysiphonia it consists of a sequence of a gametangial, carposporangial and tetrasporangial phases. [10] Male (haploid) plants (the male gametophytes) produce spermatia and the female plants (the female gametophytes) produce the carpognium (the haploid carpogonium) which remains attached to the parent female plant. After fertilization the diploid nucleus migrates and fuses with an auxiliary cell. A complex series of fusions and developments follow as the diploid zygote develops to become the carposporophyte, this is a separate phase of the life-cycle and is entirely parasitic on the female, it is surrounded by the haploid pericarp of the parent female plant. The diploid carpospores produced in the carposporangium when released are non-motile, they settle and grow to form filamentous diploid plants similar to the gametophyte. This diploid plant is the tetrasporophyte which when adult produced spores in fours after meiosis. These spores settle and grow to become the male and female plants thus completing the cycle. [5][11]

References

  1. ^ a b c C. A. Maggs & M. H. Hommersand (1993). Seaweeds of the British Isles. Volume 1: Rhodophyta. HMSO, London. ISBN 0-11-310045-0. 
  2. ^ a b R. E. Norris & M. D. Guiry (2006-03-15). Polysiphonia Greville 1823: pl. 90. AlgaeBase.
  3. ^ a b H. Stegenga, J. J. Bolton & R. J. Anderson (1997). Seaweeds of the South African West Coast. Bolus Herbarium Number 18. 
  4. ^ I. A. Abbott & G. J. Hollenberg (1976). Marine Algae of California. Stanford University Press, California. ISBN 0-8047-0867-3. 
  5. ^ a b C. van den Hoek, D. G. Mann & M. H. Jahns (1995). Algae: An Introduction to Phycology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ISBN 0-521-30419-9. 
  6. ^ Jan Parmentier (1999). Polysiphonia, a red alga. Micscape Magazine.
  7. ^ Peter von Sengbusch (2003-07-31). Polysiphonia nigrescens. Botanik online. University of Hamburg.
  8. ^ M. D. Guiry (2004-09-23). Polysiphonia echinata Harvey. AlgaeBase.
  9. ^ Polysiphonia lanosa. Marine Life Information Network for Britain & Ireland.
  10. ^ P. S. Dixon (1973). Biology of Rhodophyta. Oliver & Boyd, Edinburgh. ISBN 0-05-002485-X. 
  11. ^ J. Mondragon & J. Mondragon (2003). Seaweeds of the Pacific Coast. Sea Challengers, California. ISBN 0-930118-29-4. 
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Polysiphonia". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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