Abstract: | The discoid thallus of Erythrocladia irregularis is the result of a pattern of cellular divisions expressed by mono-and endospores; the latter are described for the first time in Erythrocladia. In nutrient enriched growth conditions the discoid thallus becomes a shapeless aggregate of unicells with a wrinkled wall surface, whose plane of division is unpredictable. The cells are able to produce monosporangia with a curved wall or they form eight-celled endosporangia. Chloroplasts have an internal pyrenoid, as is characteristic of the Erythropeltidaceae. The observation that E. irregularis can form either a colonial cluster of unicells or a discoid thallus would lead to the assignment of the genus to the Porphyridiales; however, since this order is reserved to organisms in which only the unicellular organization can be expressed, it is suggested to maintain Erythrocladia in the Erythropeltidales. |