Corallina

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Corallina
Corallinapinnatifolia.JPG
Corallina pinnatifolia
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
(unranked): Archaeplastida
Division: Rhodophyta
Class: Florideophyceae
Order: Corallinales
Family: Corallinaceae
Genus: Corallina
Linnaeus, 1758 [1]

Corallina is a genus of red seaweeds with hard, abrasive calcareous skeletons in the family Corallinaceae. They are stiff, branched plants with articulations.

Species

  1. Corallina aberrans (Yendo) K.R.Hind & G.W.Saunders
  2. Corallina abundans Me.Lemoine
  3. Corallina arbuscula Postels & Ruprecht
  4. Corallina armata J.D.Hooker & Harvey
  5. Corallina bathybentha E.Y.Dawson
  6. Corallina berteroi Montagne ex Kützing
  7. Corallina bifurca Kützing
  8. Corallina binangonensis Ishijima
  9. Corallina confusa Yendo
  10. Corallina cossmannii Me.Lemoine
  11. Corallina crassisima (Yendo) K.Hind & G.W.Saunders
  12. Corallina declinata (Yendo) K.Hind & G.W.Saunders
  13. Corallina ferreyrae E.Y.Dawson, Acleto & Foldvik
  14. Corallina goughensis Y.M.Chamberlain
  15. Corallina hombronii (Montagne) Montagne ex Kützing
  16. Corallina maxima (Yendo) K.R.Hind & G.W.Saunders
  17. Corallina melobesioides (Segawa) Martone, S.C.Lindstrom, K.A.Miller & P.W.Gabrielson
  18. Corallina microptera Montagne
  19. Corallina muscoides Kützing
  20. Corallina officinalis Linnaeus - type
  21. Corallina panizzoi R.Schnetter & U.Richter
  22. Corallina pilulifera Postels & Ruprecht
  23. Corallina pinnatifolia (Manza) E.Y.Dawson
  24. Corallina polysticha E.Y.Dawson
  25. Corallina rigida Kützing
  26. Corallina sachalinensis Klochkova
  27. Corallina sandwicensis Reinbold
  28. Corallina vancouveriensis Yendo

[2]

Related Research Articles

Chordariaceae Family of algae

Chordariaceae is a family of brown algae. Members of this family are may be filamentous, crustose with fused cells at the base, or they may be terete and differentiated into a central medulla and an outer photosynthetic cortex. They have a sporphytic thallus usually aggregated to form a pseudo-parenchyma.

Corallinaceae Family of algae

The Corallinaceae are one of the two extant Coralline families of red algae; they are differentiated from the morphologically similar Sporolithaceae by their formation of grouped sporangial chambers, clustered into sori. The Corallinoideae is monophyletic; the other subfamilies form another monophyletic group.

Delesseriaceae Family of algae

The Delessericaeae is a family of about 100 genera of marine red alga.

<i>Halymenia</i> Genus of algae

Halymenia a genus of a macroscopic red algae that grows in oceans worldwide. It includes the following species:

Rhodomelaceae Family of algae

Rhodomelaceae is estimated to be the largest red algae family, with about 125 genera and over 700 species.

<i>Lithophyllum</i> Genus of algae

Lithophyllum is a genus of thalloid red algae belonging to the family Corallinaceae.

<i>Rhodymenia</i> Genus of algae

Rhodymenia is a genus of red algae, containing the following species:

<i>Amphiroa</i> Genus of algae

Amphiroa is a genus of thalloid red algae comprising 55 species. Specimens can reach around 30 cm in size. The thalli take a crustose form; dichotomous branches are formed. The organisms possess secondary pit connections. Amphiroa reproduces by means of conceptacles; it produces tetraspores. Its pore canals are lined with parallel filaments; the morphology of the pore canal is a key trait used to delineate species within the genus.

<i>Laurencia</i> Genus of algae

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<i>Chondria</i> (alga) Genus of algae

Chondria is a red alga genus in the family Rhodomelaceae.

<i>Ectocarpus</i> Genus of seaweeds

Ectocarpus is a genus of filamentous brown alga that is a model organism for the genomics of multicellularity. Among possible model organisms in the brown algae, Ectocarpus was selected for the relatively small size of its mature thallus and the speed with which it completes its life cycle. The type species for the genus is Ectocarpus siliculosus (Dillwyn) Lyngbye. The life history is an isomorphic to slightly heteromorphic alternation of generations, but asexual strains also exist.

<i>Desmarestia</i> Genus of brown algae

Desmarestia is a genus of brown algae found worldwide. It is also called acid weed, acidweed, oseille de mer, sea sorrel, ウルシグサ, stacheltang, mermaid's hair, landlady's wig, or gruagach. However, 'sea sorrel' can also specifically refer to Desmarestia viridis. Members of this genus can be either annual or perennial. Annual members of this genus store sulfuric acid in intracellular vacuoles. When exposed to air they release the acid, thereby destroying themselves and nearby seaweeds in the process. They are found in shallow intertidal zones.

Corallina elegans is a species of red algae in the family Corallinaceae from the Mediterranean Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean.

<i>Phyllophora</i> Genus of algae

Phyllophora is a genus of red algae in the family Phyllophoraceae.

<i>Dictyota</i> Genus of seaweed in the family Dictyotaceae

Dictyota is a genus of seaweed in the family Dictyotaceae. Species are predominantly found in tropical and subtropical seas, and are known to contain numerous chemicals (diterpenes) which have potential medicinal value. As at the end of 2017, some 237 different diterpenes had been identified from across the genus.

<i>Spatoglossum</i> Genus of algae

Spatoglossum is a marine brown algal genus in the family Dictyotaceae, with a worldwide distribution

<i>Champia</i> Genus of algae

Champia is a genus of red algae in the family Champiaceae, first described in 1809 by Nicaise Auguste Desvaux

References

  1. World Register of Marine Species
  2. Algaebase Retrieved on 27 September 2014.