DEVELOPMENT OF DUMONTIA CONTORTA (DUMONTIACEAE,CRYPTONEMIALES) COMPARED WITH THAT OF OTHER HIGHER RED ALGAE1 |
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Authors: | Robert T. Wilce Andrew N. Davis |
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Abstract: | The vegetative development of juvenile and mature Dumontia contorta (S. G. Gmelin) Ruprecht is characterized. New patterns of red algal thallus development are described. Dumontia contorta has an isomorphic life history with similarly branched erect gametophytes and tetrasporophytes. Erect plants are winter-spring annuals that develop from a perennating crustose stage. Vegetative development of D. contorta includes both multiaxial and uniaxial systems. Juvenile thalli emerging from crustose bases are unbranched and entirely multiaxial; the main axis of a mature thallus is also multiaxial with the number of axial filaments decreasing acropetally as branches are initiated. Most lateral branches are uniaxial and do not rebranch. Thus, mature D. contorta is characterized by multiaxiality in the lower main axis and by uniaxiality in its branches and in the tip region of the main axis. Our study corrects a number of inaccuracies in the literature and reinterprets the pattern of thallus development in D. contorta in relation to stages of its vegetative growth. Development of D. contorta is compared with that of other higher red algae. Our results suggest an evolutionary derivation of D. contorta from the uniaxial, unbranched D. simplex. |
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Keywords: | Dumontia contorta uniaxial and multiaxial development Rhodophyta, structure |
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