Vertebrata fruticulosa (Wulfen) Kuntze, 1891

Piñeiro-Corbeira, Cristina, Maggs, Christine A., Rindi, Fabio, Bunker, Francis, Baldock, Lin & Díaz-Tapia, Pilar, 2020, Molecular assessment of the tribes Streblocladieae and Polysiphonieae (Rhodomelaceae, Rhodophyta) in the British Isles reveals new records and species that require taxonomic revision, Cryptogamie, Algologie 20 (8), pp. 55-72 : 60

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/cryptogamiealgologie2020v41a8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7819185

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E16529-9971-FFD9-FF6A-A7E788EFF84C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Vertebrata fruticulosa (Wulfen) Kuntze
status

 

Vertebrata fruticulosa (Wulfen) Kuntze

MOLECULAR IDENTIFICATION

In total 18 rbc L sequences, 16 newly determined, are available for specimens morphologically identified as Vertebrata fruticulosa from the United Kingdom, the Atlantic Iberian Peninsula and the Mediterranean. They were resolved in the rbc L phylogeny ( Fig. 2 View FIG ) in a fully supported clade that also included sequences of V.thuyoides (Harvey) Kuntze , V. tripinnata (Harvey) Kuntze , V. subulifera (C.Agardh) Kuntze and V. furcellata (C.Agardh) Kuntze.Within this clade, specimens assigned to V. fruticulosa formed two clades that diverged by 3-3.3% (21-24 bp) and that are labelled in Figure 2 View FIG as V. fruticulosa and V. martensiana . Two haplotypes of V. fruticulosa were 0.6% (4 bp) divergent. Specimens of the V. fruticulosa clade were only found in the Mediterranean, including the Adriatic Sea, its type locality. Vertebrata martensiana has a wider distribution including the Adriatic Sea, the Atlantic Iberian Peninsula and the United Kingdom. Two haplotypes were found in the Atlantic and a third one in the Mediterranean and they diverged by 0.3-0.4% (4-6 bp).

MORPHOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS

Specimens that were initially identified as Vertebrata fruticulosa ( Fig. 4 View FIG ) were predominantly erect, attached to the substratum by short prostrate axes that bear rhizoids cut off from the pericentral cells. Thalli were composed of several main axes that bear branches pseudodichotomously at wide angles (>30°) ( Fig. 4A, E, I View FIG ). They were 250-900 in diameter in mid-parts of the thallus. Trichoblasts were absent or scarcely developed. Axes had 8-12 pericentral cells and were corticate ( Fig. 4D, H, L View FIG ). Specimens of the V. fruticulosa and V. martensiana clades can be distinguished by the morphological characters indicated below.

Specimens placed in the V. fruticulosa clade had main axes of indeterminate growth that were alternately branched at regular intervals and bore alternate branches of determinate growth ( Fig. 4A, B View FIG ). Determinate branches, in turn, bore 2-3 orders of branches mostly every 3 segments ( Fig. 4C View FIG ) and were 7-9 mm in length. Axes had 11-12 pericentral cells ( Fig. 4D View FIG ).

The specimens in the V. martensiana clade had main axes branched at irregular intervals and bore branches of determinate growth ( Fig. 4E, F, I, J View FIG ). Mediterranean specimens had simple or once-branched determinate branches that were 1.5 mm in length ( Fig. 4G View FIG ). Axes had 8-10 pericentral cells ( Fig. 4H View FIG ). Atlantic specimens had determinate branches 3-5 mm in length that were simple or bore up to 2 branching orders ( Fig. 4K View FIG ) and axes with 8-12 pericentral cells ( Fig. 4L View FIG ).

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