Chylocladia verticillata
Chylocladia verticillata is a medium-sized red marine alga. DescriptionChylocladia verticillata is a marine alga which grows erect to a length of 30 cm from a disk-shaped holdfast. It branches in a whorled manner the thallus is hollow and shows constrictions at intervals, it is mucilaginous, gelatinous, and up to 5 mm broad. In colour it is pinkish or purple. The structure is multiaxial.[1][2] HabitatEpilithic or epiphytic in the lower littoral in rock pools and in the sublittoral.[1] Commonly found in the Laminarian zone.[3] ReproductionThis alga is dioecious, cystocarps occur between April and October and tetraspores between May and September.[1] The male structures are arranged around the constrictions. The sporangia are visible in the tissue of the younger branches.[4] DistributionFound around the shares of the British Isles but more rarely on the eastern shores. Also recorded from Norway to Morocco into the Mediterranean including the Canary Isles,[1] also from the Channel Islands.[4] Similar speciesChampia parvula is not common but small specimens of Chylocladia verticillata may appear similar.[4] References
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