Publication

The reproductive phenology and cultivation of Palmaria palmata on the west coast of Ireland

Whelan, Susan
Citation
Abstract
The Rhodophyte Palmaria palmata (Linnaeus) Weber and Mohr, 1805 is part of the Palmariaceae family. The Palmariaceae family can be found in cold waters of the North Atlantic and North Pacific (Morgan et al. 1980; Lüning 1990), but P. palmata is found only in the North Atlantic where it can be observed as far south as Portugal (Faes and Viejo, 2003; Grote, 2019). In Ireland and the British Isles P. palmata is commonly distributed, apart from the Norfolk coastline in the East and a small area on the West coast of England (Lancashire) (Irvine and Guiry, 1983). P. palmata grows in the lower subtidal and intertidal zones of rocky shores and can be found on hard surfaces such as rock and mussel shells (Irvine and Guiry, 1983) and as an epiphyte of Fucus spp., L. hyperborea, and L. digitata (Lüning, 1990; Edwards, 2007). It can also be noticeably abundant on shores where Sabellaria alveolata reefs are present in Ireland (personal observation). In the wild, the alga attaches and grows with a small, disc-like holdfast which then forms a short stipe and palmate (resembling a hand with fingers) thallus (frond). Fronds usually grow up to 10-40 cm but can reach up to 100 cm in length in some conditions (personal observations). The colour of the fronds are purple, crimson, or brownish-red, which turn yellow to pink after drying and bleaching in the sun (Mouritsen et al., 2013). Individuals that are greater than a year old can have a more leathery texture. New growth is produced within the meristematic tissue of P. palmata found around the apical tips of the frond. In older individuals, these regions sometimes also produce new growth in the form of proliferations (small bladelets) around the edges of the frond (Titlyanov et al., 2006; Grote, 2019; Schmedes and Nielsen, 2020a) There are several morphotypes of P. palmata recorded in Ireland (Kraan and Guiry, 2006). Typical individuals have a broad flat palmate frond, however other morphotypes that exist have much more finely dissected thalli and are usually referred to as P. palmata var. sarniensis and var. sobolifera. (Kraan and Guiry, 2006). These morphotypes often appear on shorelines that experience strong tidal flows, such as those found between islands (M. Edwards, personal communication). The completed life cycle of P. palmata was identified by van der Meer and Todd (1980; Figure 1). The P. palmata life cycle is diplohaplontic and heteromorphic with an asexual tetrasporophyte stage alternating with a sexual gametophyte stage. P. palmata displays an extreme sexual dimorphism where the females exist as a microscopic disc (0.1 mm in diameter) compared with the foliose males (up to 50 cm in length and rare cases up to 1 m). Given the size of the female gametophytes, finding them in wild populations has so far been impossible. It was only when green mutant females were isolated in culture that the life cycle could be completed, by observing in vitro the fertilisation and subsequent growth of the tetrasporophyte phase over the female (Figure 1; van der Meer and Todd, 1980). On the shore, the diploid tetrasporophytes and the male gametophytes are isomorphic; this makes it hard to tell them apart until sori are produced on the thallus when they become reproductive. For tetrasporophytes, these are dark red, slightly raised patches that are irregular in shape and fill the centre of the thallus; the male gametophytes can be identified by clear and smooth irregular patches in the same location. Essentially, male sori are the same shape as those on the tetrasporophytes but colourless (Van der Meer and Todd, 1980; Edwards and Dring, 2011; Schmedes, 2020; Schmedes et al., 2019).
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NUI Galway
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland
CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IE