SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY NUMBER 3 Wm. Randolph Taylor Marine Algae and Charles F. Rhyne of Dominica SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS CITY OF WASHINGTON I 970 ABSTRACT Taylor, Wm. Randolph and Charles F. Rhyne. Marine Algae of Dominica. Smith- sonian Contributions to Botany 3: 1-16. 1970-One hundred forty-one species of ma- rine algae are reported froq Dominica, W.I., with field notes. An ecological description of twelve collecting localities is given. A discussion of the differences between Agardhiella tenera (J. Agardh) Schmitz of the West Indies and New England is made which results in a new combination, Agardhiella baileyi (Harvey) W. R. Taylor, for the material from New England. Official publication date is handstamped in a limited number of initial copies and is recorded in the Institution?s annual report, Smithsonian Year. UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1970 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing OBce Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price 30 cents (paper cover) Wm. Randolph laylor Marine Algae and Charles F. Rhpe of Dominica Introduction viewed and is responsible for them all, and has pre- When he ceased work on his manual of eastern American tropical marine algae ( 1960), the present senior author was left unhappily aware of the general discontinuities of ranges recorded for the algae on all shores of the Caribbean. Only further detailed field studies could be expected to correct this. It has not appeared practicable at this time to begin with the most conspicuous deficiency, that of the marine flora of the large island of Cuba, nor to begin with the long Mexican and Central American mainland because of the magnitude of the task and the inaccessibility of much of the shoreline, but plans were made for studies in the Lesser Antilles and, with the important assist- ance of the National Science Foundation (Grant no. GB-3186), field and laboratory work has been carried on through 1966-1968. In one instance particularly favorable facilities were available, for the Smithsonian Institution most graci- ously arranged for complete field support of a marine algal survey of Dominica, based on the station set up for the Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian Biological Sur- vey of Dominica at Clarke Hall on the Layou River. This justifies a more detailed report here than will be practicable for the other islands. Needless to say, we are most grateful to the sponsors of the Survey and the Institution. The Institution furthermore assigned as collaborator Mr. Charles F. Rhyne of its staff, to make advance arrangements, to work with the senior author during his visit, and to continue afterwards to collect in new areas. The senior author is much in- debted to him; his contribution to the field work was important, and he has prepared the descriptions of the localities which follow. While Mr. Rhyne made many of his own determinations, the senior author has re- Wm. Randolph Taylor, Department of Botany, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Charles F. Rhyne, Department of Botany, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514. pared this report. There seems to have been only one publication on the algae of Dominica, the short list published by Symington Grieve (1909) based on his collection and the identifications by E. M. Holmes. Insofar as possible, where the records seem questionable, they have been checked. By the kindness of the Regius Keeper, Dr. H. R. Fletcher, the Royal Botanic Garden of Edin- burgh was able to lend most of the needed Grieve speci- mens, which enable several corrections to be made. A very few more species are attributed to the island in the senior author?s general work ( 1960). While little has been known respecting the algae of Dominica, the marine flora of the French islands near- by on the north has been substantially studied (Maze and Schramm 1870-77, Hamel 1929, Hamel and Hamel-Joukov 1931, Feldman 1948, Questel 1951), but this has chiefly concerned Guadeloupe. Yet farther to the north another center of activity has involved the Virgin Islands, St. Bartholomew, and the Nether- lands Antilles (Borrgesen 1913-20, Questel 1942, Vroman 1968), but, though adjacent on the south, Martinique seems to have been rather neglected (Hamel supra, Taylor 1940), as have all the islands farther south except Barbados and Grenada. Physiography and General Features of the Coast of Dominica Dominica is a relatively small, very rugged island, approximately 48 km long and 20 km broad, with two mountain masses exceeding 1,400 m in height, and several other high ridges. Much of the shoreline is not easy of access. In general it was possible to sample each parish except those of St. Peter, St. Luke, and St. David, but that of St. John could only be visited near Portsmouth. Most of the stations were exposed: rocky or sandy, for well-protected sites in bays or 1 SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY the upper intertidal zone afforded no attachment at all for intertidal species. A very characteristic flora was observed and collections were made between the middle intertidal down to about one meter below low water- line. Moderate to large tufts of Chaetomorpha nodosa were dominant in the intertidal zone interspersed with small tufts of Ectocarpus breviarticulatus higher up on the cobbles. From the low watermark to 1-2 m below, Grateloupia filicina was prominent. Throughout the wave-washed area Ralfsia discolored the majonty of cobbles and rocks, generally abundant in or near shaded crevices. Stubby immature plantlets of Sargassum were locally abundant in the lower intertidal areas. L within reefs, Thalassia or Cymodocea shoals, and man- grove-bordered shores were in short supply, and this limited considerably the variety of the flora to be expected. Nevertheless, we were able to collect again almost all the speices previously reported, hardly 20 actually, and to add well over 100 additional names. The major part of the island coast is dominated by black volcanic sand, generally interspersed with stretches of weathered rock cobbles and boulders of volcanic origin from a few inches to several feet in diameter. These long stretches, when of sloping black sand alone are decidedly inhospitable to algal attach- ment unless one ventures beyond into the shallow sublittoral zone where the bottom affords a relatively stable cobble substrate. This was found especially true along much of the leeward (Caribbean) side of the island. The windward (Atlantic) shore was generally bordered by precipitous cliffs, with large rock material in the intertidal and shallow sublittoral zones. Sand beaches were only observed on this shore on protected sides of headlands and embayments. As stated by Hodge (1954) and observed by the authors, active fringing reefs were practically non- existent except at two points, these being at Soufrie3-e Bay, Scotts Head on the southwest coast and at Calibishie on the northern coast. In both places, white sand (pulverized coral fragments) was observed in conjunction with offshore coral reefs. The paucity of coral formation can certainly be attributed to the flushing action of the many rivers depositing silt (Hodge, 1954) and could also be attributed to the drop in salinity in areas adjacent to the mouths of larger rivers. Substrate material brought back from the north (windward) coast yielded in many cases a coralline- coral conglomerate in the form of cobbles with the coral portion definitely in a moribund state. At Cali- bishie the reef area was apparently in a static state, larger fleshy algae having taken over much of the sub- littoral zone. Collecting Stations with Ecological Notes 1. St. Paul Parish, 2.4 km south of the Layou River mouth. 16 February 1967 Large cobbles and boulders covered the bottom from the middle intertidal zone out to about 2-4 m of water. Black volcanic sand forming a continuous strand along 2. St. Joseph Parish, about 400 m south of the Layou River mouth. 16 February 1967 This habitat displays a sloping black sand beach with scattered small cobbles from the low watermark out to one meter depth. A portion of this locality was influenced by fresh water from the Layou River, re- sulting in a lack of variety and general paucity of the fringing flora. The dominant species, Chondria litto- ralis, was observed throughout the area, with abundant Chaetmorpha clavata, Padina gymnospora, and robust specimens of the variable Gracilaria domingensis. The high insolation tended to bleach much of the material in these shallows to a dull yellow and white appear- ance. Farther out at a depth of 5-10 dm, Neomeris dumetosa, Sphacelaria tribuloides ( ?) , and Caulerpa cupressoides were found on and between the cobbles. A slight embayment just 100 m south of the last locality contained many specimens of interest. This area was observed under the conditions of onshore winds in conjunction with incoming tides. Large masses of unattached algae accumulated in a drifting mass some 17 m wide lying parallel to the shore. Noting the freshness of many of these specimens and their absence from the area surveyed, it must be assumed that most of these plants were being washed up from lower depths just offshore. Large specimens of Gracilaria domingen- sis were dominant in this drift, some being over 70 cm in length. Other interesting plants were Agardhiella tenera, Codium isthmocladum, Enantiocladia duper- re@, and Gracilaria damaecornis. 3. St. George Parish, beside the Post Office, Roseau Harbor. 17 February 1967 This area resembled the locality near the Layou River in that Chaetmorpha media was again dominant NUMBER 3 3 along a cobble-boulder shore with moderate to heavy surf. Several species observed here were not found at the latter locality, however, possibly in response to the heavy organic pollution of the harbor area. Two other species were also extremely abundant: Ulva fasciata and Gymnogongrus tenuis, with large quantities of Gra- cilaria ferox, Grateloupia cuneifolia, and G. filicina. Strangely, the genus Enteromorpha was not observed here at this time. 4. St. Joseph Parish, just south of the Macoucheri River. 20 February 1967 A black sand beach with interspersed cobbles was evident for miles on either side of this locality. Domi- nant was the ubiquitous Chaetomorpha nodosa, with handsome specimens of Grateloupia filicina, Galaxaura cylindrica, and Ceramium nitens, all being extremely abundant in the drift. Another species of interest was Pterocladia bartlettii as a dwarf form. Dictyota indica, Gracilaria mamillaris, Acanthophora spicifera, Giflor- dia mitchellae, Hypnea spinella, Spyridia aculeata, and Polysiphonia sphaerocarpa were all prevalent as low- growing matted forms on the stones. 5. St. Luke Parish, about 0.8 km south of Point MicheI. 21 February 1967 A rock-cobble shore was observed here, with Chaeto- morpha nodosa, Grateloupia filicina, and Wrangelia argus dominating throughout. Most prominent was W. argus, in dark tufts at the mean low-tide mark. 6. St. Mark Parish, Scotts Head, Soufriere Bay. 21 February-12 March 1967 Along the shore there was a reef, mostly of dead coral above, but with living corals in deeper water from one meter below low tide to a depth past visual observation. The transparency of the water allowed light penetra- tion to 17 meters or more, past the zone of plant attach- ment. A striking difference at this locality was the appearance of white sand derived from fragmentation of the offshore coral reef material, contrasting with the shore dominated by black sand north of this area. From the high intertidal zone to 5 dm below low water the flora is little different from corresponding spots along the leeward coast north of Scotts Head, except for the occurrence of Cladophoropsis menibra- nacea, Boodlea composita, and Struvea anastomosans. Large specimens of Colpomenia sinuosa, another spe- cies not found elsewhere, were locally frequent, borne on the common white sea urchin. Azone of Sargassums was observed at about 5-15 dm depth which paralleled the shore, affording protection for smaller algae such as Gelidiella acerosa, Jania ru- bens, Wurdemannia miniata, Laurencia microcladia, and L. papillosa. On either side of the Sargassum zone, Padina sp., Dictyota dentata, Galaxaura rugosa, G. squalida, and Acanthophora rnuscoides occurred sporadically. Ralfsia expansa encrusted the cobbles and suitable substrates from low watermark to one meter below. As one approached the tip of the headland at Scotts Head, the surf became much rougher and the flora richer, abundant in the upper sublittoral zone, with dense stands of Sargassum vulgare, Turbinaria turbi- nata, and irridescent Dictyota dentata. It was interest- ing however, to note the contrasting paucity of num- bers and species from about a depth of 3 dm down- ward. In fact the latter area appeared sterile. Only once during the field work did the surf condi- tions allow one to work out from the water?s edge on the southern side of Scotts Head, which receives some of the force of the Atlantic surf. It is a locality with extremely heavy wave action and winds, and generally with only Saragassum platycarpum, other Saragassums, and Dictyota dentata washed up on the sloping cobble beach. Large clumps of Chamaedoris peniculum were prevalent in the sublittoral zone at 1-4 m depth. Occa- sionally Caulerpa racemosa and Dictyota dentata were found in this area, with Pocockiella variegata in large scattered patches over the bottom. Farther out a Iarge flat coral-coralline encrusted rock formation provided substrate for Sargassums and Dictyota dentata. Along the edge of this reef in depths of 3-7 m occurred robust specimens of Stypopodium zonale, a species not found elsewhere on the island. 7. St. David Parish, shore at Rosalie. 22 February 1967. Located a few hundred meters north of the Rosalie River was a cobble beach subjected to extremely heavy surf action. An abundant growth of Enteromorpha jlexuosa on the cobbles in the intertidal area indicated probable pollution from the nearby river mouth. Several species, such as Cryptonemia luxurians, Bryo- thamnion triquetrum, and Sargassum spp., were found as drift. Unfortunately, it was impossible to make ob- servations below the upper intertidal zone. 4 SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY Algal material was attached to cobbles and coral frag- ments just beyond the inshore reef at depths of 1.0- 1.5 m. It was here that a brown gelatinous thallus was found in great abundance, which later proved to be a palmelloid diatom colony, with many thalli reaching 20 cm or more in extent. This has been identified by the kindness of Mr. Robert Ross, Keeper of Botany, British Museum (N.H.) as Amphipleura micans var. fragilis (Grev.) Cleve. On Thalassia blades, Fosliella lejolisii and F. farinosa were extremely abundant. Cor- alline algal fragments were scattered about the bottom, some reaching 10 cm in diameter. As much as 75 percent of the available substrate appeared to be litho- thaminoid in nature. Also common in this area were Chamaedoris peniculum, Ernodesmis verticillata, Si- phonocladus tropicus, Pocockiella variegata, Galax- auras, and Asparagopsis taxiformis. (2) Attached to the exposed inshore reef surface was a thick carpet of Jania rubens and Cladophoropsis membrnnacea which covered most of the top of the reef, and the vegetation rising above it was dominated by large yel- low streaks of Laurencia corallopsis, abundant Gelidi- ella acerosa, Digenia simplex, and scattered clumps of Padina gymnospora. The leading edge of the reef down to one meter was richly clothed by Sargassums, with large clump9 of Gracilaria debilis, and with abundant patches of lithothamnia. Just behind the reef on the leeward side, tide pools exposed at low tide gave pro- tection to several plants of Penicillus capitatus. (3) About 75 m offshore there was a shoal associated with an exposed ridge 25-30 m high. This shoal was so situ- ated as to miss most of the heavy incoming surf at high tides and to be relatively calm at lower tides. In tide pools ranging in depth from 0.5 to 4 dni Peni- cillus capitatus was found to be locally abundant. Ap- proximately a dozen small and poorly developed plants of Udotea flabellum were found in a few shallow sand- bottomed pools. The genus was unusually scarce about Dominica. (4) The majority of the species found in the abundant drift along the beach and in the backwash behind the inshore reef were also collected as attached plants from the intertidal zone out to a depth of 2 in. A few of the drifting species were not found attached, such as Amann?a multifida, Cryptonemia sp., Gelidium sp., and Vidalia obtusiloba. Such drifting material was probably derived from colonies at greater depths, though, possibly, plants occurred throughout in small amounts and were overlooked. 8. St. John Parish, Prince Rupert Bay just north of Lagon. 23 February 1967. In this calm, shallow, but large embayment, repre- sentative species such as Padinas, Pterocladia ameri- cana, P. bartlettii, Chaetomorpha hum, Dictyota cervicornis, Ralfsia sp., Sargassum sp., and Laurencia sp. were common, with Hypnea musciformis, Dictyota ciliata, Cladophora sp., and Galaxaura sp. locally abun- dant. The shallow sublittorial consisted of encrusted cobbles wtih some dead coral fragments, upon which lay a thin layer of silt. Uniformity of habitat combined with high insolation produced an abundant but repe- titious flora. 9. St. John Parish, Douglas Bay at Tanetane. 24 Feb- ruary 1967 Basically this was the same type of habitat as found in the Prince Rupert Bay area, but with a rougher, rockier shoreline. In some areas Wrangelia argus was found abundant as small tufts covering the tips of sub- merged rocks with Struvea anastomosans and Gymno- gongrus tenuis locally abundant. The sloping sand beach supported Liagora decussata, Grateloupia fili- cina, and Cladophora in patches on somewhat sand- covered rocks. 10. St. John Parish, Portsmouth, at the mouth of the Picard River. 24 February 1967 Overall the shore appeared very sterile with only two major growths evident: a species of blue-green Lyngbya on small tree limbs submerged in water and a red alga that was locally common attached to cobbles. 11. St. Andrew Parish, coral reef at Calibishie. 25 February, 3 March 1967 The area appeared to be characterized by the out- lying coral reef, the shore a white sand beach with many fragments of old coral heads along the upper intertidal zone. The coral portion of the reef was ap- parently not flourishing as well as the one at Scotts Head and possibly was in a dying state. Much of the sublittoral area was overgrown with larger benthic algae while lithothamnia predominated in both at- tached and loose fragment forms. Certain localities at Calibishie differed significantly, so that they are here treated individually. (1) This first area was heavily swept by diagonal backwash cur- rents along with heavy agitation on incoming tides. NUMBER 3 5 12. St. Andrew Parish, shoreline in Woodford Hill Bay. 3 March 1967 An area observed on the west side of Pointe La Soie in Woodford Hill Bay was similar to that of Calibishie. A heavy surf continually pounded this cobble-coralline- coral reef substrate, supporting a rich variety of algae, such as Gracilaria debilis, Galaxaura cylindrica, Dicty- ota dentata, Laurencia corallopsis, and L. papillosa. The undergrowth carpet for the most part consisted of a species of Jania. Shaded tide pools higher up in the intertidal zone yielded large amounts of Hypnea musci- formis, Gelidiella acerosa, Spyridia aculeata, and Cen- troceras clavulatum. At the edge of the reef washed by the surf, Bryocladia thyrsigera was found in abun- dance, while Dictyopteris delicatula was very abundant at depths of 3-10 dm, together with Galaxaura cy- lindrica. A most interesting form of Laurencia poitei with flat axes in bilateral blades was also observed in this reef edge area. The influence of the Woodford Hill River was sharply defined by large populations of Enteromorpha clathrata and Chaetomorpha nodosa. Traveling up the river about 30 to 70 m, the exposed root systems of Pterocarpus oficinalis were clothed with Bostrychia rivularis, and Compsopogon caeruleus ap- peared at 185 m from the river mouth. Turning away from the headland toward the cen- ter of the bay, the shore was lined with a light gray sand. At this point a rather extensive reef area similar to the Calibishie reef exposed itself. Adjacent to this structure was attached Heminthocladia calvadosii in xbundance. Heavy surf conditions were evident, with a strong backwash from the lee side of the reef, where Polysiphonia ferulacea, Grateloupia filicina, and Hypnea musciformis were dominant. List of Taxa The localities are cited according to parishes, start- ing with St. George, and followed in a clockwise direc- tion. Our collecting station numbers are printed in boldface. An asterisk (*) is used to mark species newly recorded from Dominica. Serial numbers of the material we collected jointly are preceded by the last digits of the collection year (67-234), while his initial designates those collected by the junior author separately (R-234). The first set of material has been deposited in the Smithsonian Institution and the second in the herbarium of the University of Michigan. Finally, incorporated in the list are those algae in a small collection made in July 1966 by William L. Stem and Dieter C. Wasshausen (S&W-234), which add essentially new localities. The use of this collection has been a welcome privilege. Class CHLOROPHYCEAE Order ULOTRICHALES Family CHAETOPELTIDACEAE *Diplochaete solitaria Collins St. Mark: Area 6, R307B, on Herposiphonia from the offshore reef. Family ULVACEAE "Enteromorpha chthrata (Roth) J. Agardh St. Andrew: 12, R-246, at the river mouth, intertidal and common. St. Joseph: 2, 67-338, on rocks just below low tide level in an area of boulders and cobbles surrounded by black sand. St. John: 8, 67486, drifted ashore; 9, 67500, frequent as attached to Iarge rocks. St. David: 7, 67457, also with E. lingulata, 67-458 p.p., common on rocks in heavy surf. St. Joseph: north of St. Joseph, R. M. King C-1139. St. David: 7, 67-458 as noted above. Doubtless it is at least as abundant as E. fleruosa, and both really common, especially near settlements, or wherever there may be a little pollution, but these commonplace species were seldom collected. St. Andrew: 11, 67-531. St. George: 3, 67348, abundant on the shore rocks be- tween tide levels. St. Joseph: 4, 67396, frequent on the rocks in a dwarf form. St. John: 8,67487, tufts of a dwarf form drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 12, R-218, common on the reef. St. Mark: 6, 67428, R-279, frequent on the rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head, and infrequent on small stones in sandy areas. Grieve ( 1909, p. 8) mentions the presence of this alga on Dominica without giving a definite locality. About the island, as elsewhere in the West Indies, the aspect of U. fasciata varies a great deal. In the narrow and branched form it is at once recognizable, but at times the resemblance to U. lactuca v. rigida is great, especially in crowded, dwarfed forms, and microscopic examination of frond sections must be made. *Enteromorpha flexuosa ( Wulfen) J. Agardh *Enteromorpha lingulata J. Agardh Ulva lactuca Linn~eus Ulva fasciata Delile 6 SMITHSONUN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY Order CLADOPHORALES Family VALONIACEAE *Ernodesmis verticillata (Kutzing) ho gesen St. Andrew: 11, 67-526, frequent on rocks beyond the inshore reef in 6-12 dm of water, also, drifted ashore, 67-564. *Siphonocladus tropicus (Crouan) J. Agardh St. Andrew: 11, 67-562, R-176, frequent on the reef edge to a depth of 6 dm, and numerous plants drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67-538, frequent as attached among coral fragments beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Mark: 6, R-291, on the south side common at 12-30 dm depth. St. Andrew: 11, R-195, R-199, on the inshore reef. St. Andrew: 11, 67554, attached to rocks of the inshore reef. St. John: 8, 67-483, drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67- 559, R-173A, drifted ashore and abundant on the inshore reef. St. Mark: 6, 67-425, R-266, soft tufts common on rocks of the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. Mark: 6, 67-426, R-268, forming dense cushions on rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. John: 9, 67-492, scarce as attached to rocks along the beach. St. Andrew: 11, R-170, epiphytic on Digenia on the inshore reef. St. Mark: 6, 67-434, scarce on the rocks along the shore of the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. Andrew: 11, 67-580, in the drift, probably from the rocky reef offshore; 12, R-214, on the coral reef. A plant of crevices in exposed reefs and rocky shores, sdldom in accessible places on this island. *Chamaedoris peniculum (Ellis & Solander) Kuntze *Dictyosphaeria caornosa (Forssk %l ) Borgesen skal Beorgesen *Dictyosphaeria vanbosseae Borgesen *Cladophoropsis membranacea (C. Agardh) Borgesen *Boodlea composita (Harvey) Brand *Struvea anastomosans (Harvey) Piccone *Anadyomene stellata (Wulfen) C. Agardh Family CLADOPHORACEAE *Chaetomorpha hum (Mullerilleu Kiitzing St. Paul: 1, 67-360, drifted ashore. St. John: 8, 67479, very common as entangled among other attached algae. Also 67-488, drifted ashore. *Chaetomorpha nodosa Kutzing St. Paul: 1, 67-328, wmmon on the boulders at the high- est algal level; 0.8 km. south of Layou, SbW-27810, be- tween Layou and Goodwill, SbW-27864. St. Joseph: On rocks just north of St. Joseph, R. M. King C-1137; 4, 67-410, common in similar situations. St. John: 9, 67498, on the larger rocks. St. Andrew: 11, 67-553; 12, R-247, common in situations such as those in St. Paul Parish. St. Mark: 6, 67-422, common in similar situations on the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. John: 6, 67-495, 67-499, common on the intertidal rocks. St. George: 3, 67-353, in considerable quantity. St. Mark: 6, 67-423, R-264, frequent as attached to the intertidal rocks and at a depth of about 3 dm, on the peninsula to Scotts Head. Grieve ( 1909, p. 8) probably refers to this species under the name C. antennina Kutzing as a misidentification, re- porting it from the northeast coast, which would indicate St. Andrew Parish. St. Joseph: 2, 67-333, forming numerous tufts on the rocks. Cells markedly swollen, as visible to the unaided eye. Rhizoclonium arenosum (Carmichael) Kutzing St. George: Roseau, according to Grieve (1909, p. 9), a doubtful record. Grieve also reported the var. occidentalis Kutzing from the same place, but I would consider his specimen under this name in the herbarium of the Edinburgh Botanic Garden to be Chaetomorpha nodoscl. St. Andrew: 11, R-173, R-l82A, R-l89C, abundant on the inshore reef. St. Paul: 1, 67362, frequent in the drift. St. Joseph: 2, 67-339, on boulders. St. John: 8, 67-473, attached to the rocks; 9, 67-504, 67-505, where frequent as attached to rocks off the sandy beach. St. Andrew: 12, R-215, on a cobblestone reef. *Chaetomorpha aerea (Dillwyn) Kutzing Chaetomorpha media (Wulfen) C. Agardh *Chaetomorpha clavata (C. Agardh) Ku tzing *Cladophora fuliginosa Kutzing *Cladophora fascicularis (Mertens) Kutzing Order SIPHONOCLADIALES Family DASYCLADACEAE *Neomeris dumetosa Lamouroux St. Joseph: 2, 67-334, very scarce and small, on stones below low tide level. St. Andrew: 11, R-198, on the inshore reef. *Neomeris annulata Dickie Order SIPHONALES Family CAULERPACEAE *Caulerpa cupressoides (West) C. Agardh, var. cupressoides St. Andrew: 11, R-154, on the offshore reef, and R-185, on a coral-cobble bottom at 6-9 dm depth. *Caulerpa cupressoides var. lycopodium (J. Agardh) Weber- van Bosse f. elegans (Crouan) Weber-van Bosse. St. Joseph: 2, R-318, 67-337, occasional colonies growing on the sand. St. Andrew: 11, 67-534, on rocks beyond the inshore reef at a depth of 6-12 dm. St. Paul: 1, 67-363, drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 2, R-319, 67-463, on cobbles at about 6 dm depth. St. Andrew: 11, R-186, on the inshore reef. *Caulerpa racemosa (Forssail) J. Agardh Caulerfia sertularioides (Gmelin) Howe NUMBER 3 7 *Caulerpa taxifolia (Vahl) C. Agardh St. Andrew: 11, 67-540, attached to rocks beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Andrew: 12, R-218, very scarce, in offshore tide-pools; *Udotea flabelturn (Ellis & Solander) Lamouroux * 11, R-150. *Penicillus capitatus Lamarck St. Andrew: 11, R-151, R-174, R-187, frequent in off- shore rock tide-pools. Halimeda simulans Howe St. John: 8, at 11-28 m, W. L. Schmitt, 28 iii 56. Re- ported in Hillis 1959, p. 369 (but in University of Michigan Herbarium). St. Paul: 1, 67-364, one large specimen drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67-532, infrequent as attached to rocks beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. *Codium isthmocladum Vickers Class PHAEOPHYCEAE Order ECTOCARPALES Family ECTOCARPACEAE *Ectocarpus breuiarticulatus J. Agardh St. Paul: 1, 67-330, on large boulders. St. Joseph: 4, 67- 407, on rocks along the shore. St. John: 9, 67-502, on rocks off the sandy beach. St. Mark: 6,67-441, rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. Joseph: 4,67-409, on rocks along shore. 'Gifordia mitchellae (Harvey) Hamel Order SPHACELARIALES Family SPHACELARIACEAE 'Sphacelaria tribuloides Meneghini St. Paul: 1, 67-325, scarce, on the large rocks along shore, Order DICTYOTALES Family DICTYOTACEAE 'Dilophus guineensis (Kutzing) J. Agardh St. Paul: 1, 67-365. St. Joseph: 2, 67-394, brought ashore on a fisherman's net, coll. Rhyne; 4, 67-411, on scattered rocks. St. Mark: 6, R-277, at depths of 6-30 m; R-294A, the south side. This species is widely distributed and very common on other islands, hut since often small in the intertidal zone of * In a paper in press, written subsequent to the preparation of this Dominica report, the senior author questions the cor- rectness of the joint citation of Ellis and Solander as authors of several species names. exposed shores it may have been neglected in collecting on Dominica. St. Andrew: 11,67-579, drifted ashore. Grieve (1909, p. 10) lists this (as D. bartayresiana) with- out citing a definite station, hut there is nothing implausible about the record. St. John: 8,67-490, drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 4,67-386, one plant only. St. John: 8, 67-480, attached on rocks along the shore. St. Joseph: SbW-27861, south of Mero. St. John: 8, 67- 471, frequent as attached to the rocks. St. Andrew: 11, 67-583. St. Mark: 6, R-300, on the south side, frequent at 12-30 dm depth. St. Paul: SbW-27874, between Layou and Goodwill. St. Paul: 1, 67-357, numerous plants drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 4, 67-387, on rocks along the beach. St. Andrew: 11, 67-543, locally common on rocks beyond the inshore coral reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Mark: 6, 67-449, on the south side, frequent as drifted ashore. Probably quite common but the tendency to limit col- lections to well-grown plants caused the much more nu- merous dwarfed ones of the low intertidal zone of exposed shores to be neglected. This is true for the Dictyotas and Padinas in general, for unless the plants are well grown the identifications are always unreliable. St. George: 3, 67-355, scarce as washed ashore. St. Joseph: 4, 67-401, 67-408. St. John: Grieve (1909, p. 9) lists this from Portsmouth. St. Mark: 6, R-294B, on the south side, frequent at 9-30 dm depth. "Dictyopteris plagiogramma (Montagne) Vickers St. Andrew: 12, R-256B, a scrap drifted ashore. "Pocockiella uariegata (Lamouroux) Papenfuss St. Andrew: 11,67542, R-184, locally abundant, attached to rocks and coral cobbles beyond the inshore at 6-12 dm depth. Also, drifted ashore, 67-578. St. Mark: 6, R-290, on the south side, at depths of 12-30 dm. Stypopodium zonale (Lamouroux) Papenfuss St. Mark: 6, R-289, on the south side, scarce at depths of 3-6 m. St. Joseph: 4,67-381; scarce at this location. St. Joseph: 2, 67-340, common on large rocks scattered over the sand. St. Andrew: 11,67-555, common as attached plants on the inshore reef. St. Mark: 6, R-269, frequent at depths of 6-1 2 dm. Padinas were not uncommon about the island, hut often only 1-2 cm tall and sterile, so that identification was sel- dom practicable +Dilophus alternans J. Agardh Dictyota bartayresii Lamouroux *Dictyota divaricata Lamouroux *Dictyota indica Sonder "Dictyota cervicornis Kutzing "Dictyota ciliolata Kutzing "Dictyota jamaicensis W. R. Taylor "Dictyota dentata Lamouroux Dictyopteris delicatula Lamouroux "Padina uickersiae Hoyt "Padina gymnospora (Ku tzing) Vickers 8 Order PUNCTARIALES SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY Family COMPSOPOGONACEAE *Compsopogon caeruleus (Balbis) Montagne St. Andrew: 12, R-248A, about 185 m from the bay, very abundant on the roots of Pterocarpus. Family PUNCTARIACEAE "Colpomenia sinuosa (Roth) Derb&s and Solier St. Andrews: 11, 67-530, common as attached to rocks beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Mark: 6, 67-429, frequent on rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. John: S&W-27825 Prince Rupert Bay, Portsmouth Harbor. "Rosenvingea sanctae-crucis Borgesen Order FUCALES Family SARGASSACEAE Sargassum filipendula C. Agardh St. Mark: 6,67446, on the south side. The rather inadequate specimens which Grieve (1909, p. 9) assigned here, without specifying a definite locality, seem to belong in S. vulgare, so his may be considered a a rather unsatisfactory new record for the island. St. David: 7,67453. St. George: 3, 67-347, a small amount washed ashore; 1, 67-332, on rocks scattered along the shore; 67-376, drifted ashore. St. John: Grieve (1909, p. 9) lists this species from Portsmouth. St. Andrew: 11, 67-560, drifted ashore. St. David: 7, 67-455. St. Mark: 6, 67-430, R-302, abundant on rocks at the reef edge at 3-15 dm depth. , var. *foliosissinurn (Lamouroux) C. Agardh St. John: 8,67-476,67-477. Sargassum pteropleuron Grunow Grieve (1909, p. 9) lists this without a definite station. "Sargnssum hystrix J. Agardh St. David: 7, 67-452. Sargassum platycarpum Montagne St. David: 7, 67-454, on the boulders. St. Mark: 6, R-298, on the south side, on reef rock at depths of 0.9-6.0 m. Grieve (1909, p. 9) lists this species without citing a definite locality. It does not seem to be as common about the island, or at least not as well developed, as on several other islands of the Lesser Antilles. St. Mark: 6, R-301, abundant at the reef edge at depths of 3-15 m. "Sargatsum rigidulum Ku tzing Sargassum vulgare C. Agardh "Turbinaria turbinata (Linnaeus) Kuntze Class RHODOPHYCEAE Order BANGIALES Family BANGIACEAE "Erythrocladia subintegra Rosenvinge St. George: 3, 67-353 p.p., epiphytic on Chaetomorpha media, intertidal on rocks. Order HELMINTHOCLADIALES Family HELMINTHOCLADIACEAE *HelminthocEadia calvadosii (Lamouroux) Setchell *Liagora ceranoides Lamouroux St. Andrew: 12, R-250, locally abundant on the reef. St. Joseph: 2, 67-464, common on rocks at a depth of a meter or somewhat more. St. Andrew: 11, 67-527, fre- quent on rocks beyond the inshore reef at depths of 6-12 dm. St. John: 8, 67-469, attached to rocks in shallow water. St. Paul: 11, 67-327, frequent on rocks in shallow water. St. John: 9, 67-501, abundant in patches on rocks off the sandy beach. It was a particular piece of good fortune to find this very striking species on Dominica, for it has seldom been collected: on Jamaica (for Phyc. Bor.-Amer. no. 89 by Pease and Butler), on Guadeloupe (Crouan) and on St. Vincent (the type-locality) . St. John: 8, 67-474, attached to rocks in quiet water. St. Andrew: 11, R-158, very abundant at 3-6 dm. depth. St. Mark: 6, 67-435, frequent on the rocks of the penin- sula to Scotts Head. St. Paul: 1, 67-372B, drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67-584, drifted ashore. St. Mark: 6, R-262, infrequent. St. Paul: 1, 67-372C, drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 4, 67- 377, frequent as drifted ashore; S&W-27850, south of Mero, on a rocky bottom. St. Andrew: 11, 67-545, R-202, on cobbles and the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth; 12, R-233, common at 3-9 dm depth. St. Paul: 1,67-373, drifted ashore. St. Paul: 2, SBW-27813; 1, 67-368, on a rocky bottom, and scarce as drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 4, 67-379, scarce as drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67-569, drifted ashore; "Liagora valida Harvey *L. decussata Montagne "Galaxaura squalida Kjellman *Galaxaura subverticillata Kjellman *Galaxaura rugosa (Ellis & Solander) Lamouroux *Galaxaura cylindrica (Ellis & Solander) Lamouroux *Galaxaura oblongata (Ellis & Solander) Lamouroux *Galaxaura marginata (Ellis & Solander) Lamouroux 12, R-23. Family BONNEMAISONIACEAE *Asparagopsis taxiformis (Delile) Collins and Hervey St. Andrew: 11, R-159, abundant over the cobbles at 6-12 dm depth. 9 NUMBER 3 Order GELIDIALES Family GELIDIACEAE *Gelidiella acerosa (Forssal) St. Paul: 2, SbW-27814, Feldmann and Hamel on a rocky bottom. St. Mark: 6, 67-431, locally common on the intertidal rocks. St. Andrew: 11, 67541, R-189, attached to rocks beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth; abundant on this reef, 67-458; 12, R-210, common on the reef. St. Andrew: Marigot Bay, R. G. Fennah 1939, in pools on a rocky ledge. Reported by Taylor (1960, p. 353) without definite locality. St. Andrew: 11, 67-572, from rocks along shore. Doubtless a general component of the dense mats of very small algae which are almost everywhere in exposed situations on rocks. St. Paul: 1, 67-331, on intertidal rocks in shallow water. St. Joseph: 4, 67-380, drifted ashore. St. John: 8, 67-467, common as attached to rocks in shallow water. St. John: 8, 67-468, attached to rocks in shallow water. St. Mark: 6, R-297, on the atlantic south side, frequent at 9-30 dm. Gelidiopsis planicaulis (W. R. Taylor) Taylor 'Gelidium pusillum (Stackhouse) Le Jolis *Pterocladia bartlettii W. R. Taylor "Pterocladia americana W. R. Taylor "Pterocladia pinnata (Hudson) Papenfuss Family WURDEMANNIACEAE * Wurdemannia miniata (Draparnaud) Feldmann and Hamel St. Mark: 6, 67-438, on the rocks of the peninsula to Scotts Head. Order CRYPTONEMIALES Family RHIZOPHYLLIDACEAE *Ochtodes secundiramea (Montagne) Howe St. Andrew: 11, 67-577, R-191, drifted ashore, and fre- quent on the reef. Many Rhodophyceae when growing exposed to strong light show strong color changes: i.e., Wrangelia argus appears nearly black, while Laurencia papillosa changes from blackish-purple through green to yellow, whereas Ochtodes maintains its distinctive bright red color. Family CORALLINACEAE *Fosliella lejolisii (Rosanoff) Howe St. Andrew: 11, 67-536, abundant on Thalassia among coral fragments beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth; 12, R-230A p.p., on Amansia. St. Andrew: 11, 67-5824, R-157, abundant on Thalassia. Doubtless Fosliellas were much more common about *Fosliella farinosa (Lamouroux) Howe Dominica than these collection records would indicate, but Thalassia beds were not conspicuous about the island, and they furnish the chief habitat for these plants. St. Andrew: 11, 67-552, R-175, attached to rocks as the common turf-forming element of the inshore reef. St. Mark: 6, 67-436, on rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head. Grieve (1909, p. 12) reports this without recording a definite station. The supporting specimen consists of a very few segments which do not seem to be A. breviarticulata or A. fragilissima, but possibly might be A. beauvoisii, en- tangled among Centroceras filaments. St. Andrew: 11, 67-533, locally common as attached to rocks and coral beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Paul: 1,67-371, scarce as drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11,677585, scarce as drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, R-189A. St. Mask: 6, 67439B, on the rocks of the peninsula to Scotts Head. St. Joseph: 2, 67-335, occasional good colonies in shallow water. St. Andrew: 11, 47-550, attached to Digenia on rocks of the inshore reef. St. Mark: 6, 67-432, R-260, common on rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head, form- ing extensive mats at 6-1 2 dm depth. Amphiroa fragilissima (Linnaeus) Lamouroux Amphiroa breuiarticulata Areschoug *Amphiroa rigida Lamouroux, var. antdlana Borgesen *Corallina cubensis (Montagne) Kutzing *Corallina subulata Ellis & Solander "Jania capillacea Harvey "Jania rubens (Linnaeus) Lamouroux Family GRATELOUPIACEAE Grateloupia fdicina (Wulfen) C. Agardh St. George: 3, 67-349, common intertidally on rocks. St. Paul: 1,67-327, commonon intertidal rocks. St. Joseph; 4, 67-397, common on the rocks. St. John: 8, 67-489, drifted ashore; 9, 67-493, 67-503, common locally on rocks and drifted ashore. St. David: 7, 67-462, often dwarf, on rocks in the surf. Grieve ( 1909, p. 11 ) reports this species without definite locality. He also reports the var. Hiformis J. Ag., and G. prolongata J. Ag. with its var. cauda De Toni, but the record specimens do not seem distinct from G. filicina, simply being poorly developed individuals. St. George: 3, 67-350, common on the rocks. St. Luke: 5,67420, on the rocks. Grieve (1909, p. 11) reported G. cutleriae Kiutzing with- out a definite station. The record specimens seems referable to G. cuneifolia. "Grateloupia cuneifolia J. Agardh Grateloupia uersicolor J. Agardh Grieve (1909, p. 11) reported this plant without a definite station, but no confirming specimen has become available. The record is very doubtful, since the type of the species comes from Pacific Mexico, and it is not certainly known from Atlantic waters. St. David: 7,67450. "Cryptonemia luxurians (Mertens) J. Agardh 10 SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY Order GIGARTINALES Family GRACILARIACEAE *Gracilaria uerrucosa (Hudson) Papenfuss *Gracilaria debilis (Forsskal) Borgesena l) Borgesen St. Paul: 1,67-367, occasional as drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67-554B, attached to rocks of the inshore reef; 12, R-231, frequent at the reef edge. St. Paul: 1, 67-370, scarce as drifted ashore. St. Andrew: 11, 67-554B, attached to rocks of the inshore reef. St. George: 3, 67-352, frequent on the intertidal rocks. St. Joseph: 12, R-324, R-325, common on the reef at 3-6 dm. St. John: Sew-27847 p.p. Prince Rupert Bay, Portsmouth Harbor. St. Paul: 1, 67-374, large plants common as washed ashore. St. Joseph: 2, Rhyne 67-392, brought ashore on a fisherman?s net; R-309, 67-342, drifted ashore and on stones among black sand; 4, 67-383. St. Andrew: 11, R-I 78, infrequent. Narrow-bladed, generously branched specimens suggest a connection with G. cervicornis, but the sparingly branched individuals with long axes 2 cm broad are so markedly different that merging the species seems un- reasonable. St. Paul: 2, SbW-27815. St. Joseph: 4, 67-415, on rocks along shore, a somewhat peculiar form of recurved habit. St. John: SBW-27834, Prince Rupert Bay, Portsmouth Harbor. *Gracilaria damaecornis J. Agardh *Gracilaria ferox J. Agardh ?Gradaria ceruicornis (Turner) J. Agardh ?(Gracilaria domingensis Sonder ?Gracilaria mammillaris (Montagne) Howe -*Gracilaria sjostedtii Kylin Family SOLIERIACEAE ?Eucheuma echinocarpum Areschoug St. Andrew: 11, 67-558, 67-576, drifted ashore; 12, R,- 235, infrequent along the reef edge. ?Eucheuma schrammi (Crouan) J. Agardh St. Andrew: 12, R-236, infrequent along the reef edge. Agardhiella tenera (J. Agardh) Schmitz-Plants tending to a colonial habit, the bases ramified and intertwined, attach- ing by small digitate holdfasts, generally bearing several erect axes; erect portions to 10-25 cm tall, 1.5-2.0 mm diameter, widely and irregularly alternately branching, or with distinct excurrent axes which bear a few similar inde- terminate branches and, alternately and radially, numerous subsimple, somewhat more slender, acute-tipped branchlets. Structurally showing a cortex of a single compact surface layer of small chromatophore-bearing cells with two, seldom to four layers of inner colorless cells increasing in size toward the center; the medullary cavity more or less loosely filled with filaments of three types, consisting of one or more major longitudinal filaments (18)-32-45-(65) p diameter which eventually become very thick walled, and which occasionally bear short slender lateral branchlets that may divide several times to connect with other fila- ments and the cortex, and also as the third type numerous very slender thin-walled loosely anastomosing filaments (3.8)-4.7-6.5-( 10.0) p diameter. Zonate tetrasporangia occur in the outer cortex, (17)-23-31-(46) p diameter, 36-46-(60) p long. The cystocarps are also immersed in the cortex, causing moderate lateral swelling, discharging through a pore. Spermatangia were not seen on this material. Because of the large number of collections studied, only a small representative sampling can be cited. While almost all countries and islands are mentioned, not all provinces, counties, or parishes could be included. Except for specimens of historical interest, collection dates are not significant enough to justify inclusion. FLORIDA: Dade County, Key West, W. H. Harvey 40 (as Rhabdonia baileyi), February 1850 (NY) ; Brevard County, Indian River, E. Palmer 52, 1874 (WRT). BAHAMAS : New Providence Island, Nassau, M. S. Synder s. n., 1895 (UM). CUBA: Habana Province, Playa de Marianas, Baker B Van Heuman s. n., (NY); Oriente Province, Gibara, Diaz-Pifferer 223 (WRT) . JAMAICA: no location, Pease b Butler s. n., 1900 (NY); St. Thomas Parish, Roselle, Taylor 56-168 (UM). HAITI: southwest peninsula, southwest coast, Anse a Dnck, C. R. Orcutt 9794 (NY), same but northwest coast, Jeremie, H. H. Bartlett 27869 (UM). PUERTO RICO: San Juan Province, Catano, M. A. Howe 2271 (NY); Mayaguez Province, Mayaguez, Diaz-Pifferer 2067 (NY). VIRGIN ISLANDS: St. Thomas Island, Charlotte Amalie, F. Borgesen s. n., (NY) ; St. Croix Island, Christiansted, Borgesen 193 (UM). NEVIS: St. Thomas Lowland Parish, Pinneys Beach, Taylor 68-242 (UM). ANTIGUA: St. John Parish, causeway to Rat Island, Taylor 67-274 (UM). GUADELOUPE: Saunay, C. LcGallo 160 (WRT). DOMINICA: St. Joseph; 4, 67-358, 67-389, 67426; St. Paul 2, 67-369. ST. VINCENT: St. George Parish, Calliaqua Bay, G. R. Proctor A.2596 (UM). BARBADOS : St. Michael Parish, Kensington, A. Vickers, Algues de la Barbade 223, 13 January 1899; St. Joseph Parish, Bathsheba, Vickers, ibid., also 223, 26 January 1903 (NY). GRENADA: St. Andrew Parish, Grenville Beach, Taylor 66-298. TOBAGO : Rockley Bay, Scarborough, Taylor 39-500 (UM) . TRINIDAD: Taparo Point, W. D. Richardson 2685 (WRT). COSTA RICA: Limon Province, Puerto Limon, C. W. Dodge et al. 42 (WRT). Columbia: Bolivar Department, Cartagena, F. A. Barkley 28B0009 (WRT). VENEZUELA: Federal District near Caracas, G. Falcon, 12, 26, 67 (WRT). BRAZIL: Ceara Province, Fortaleza, F. Drouet 1360 (WRT), Sao Paulo Province, Ilha Sao SebastiZo, A. B. Joly 52 (WRT). Since I feel that a distinction must be made between the Agardhiella typical of the West Indies and that of New England, I have introduced the discussion of this species with a description entirely based on West Indian NUMBER 3 11 FIGURE l.-AgandhieZZa tenera (J. Agardh) Schmitz: a, from a loose substrate of coarse granular material showing a loosely entangled basal portion and erect branches without dominant axes (plant from Tobago) ; b, from a firm substrate, the entangled base compact, the erect portions with distinctive main axes (plant from Dominica). material, excluding reproductive structures not readily described from herbarium material. In short, the plants grow in colonies-if on a firm substrate, with compact fibrous bases felted together, if on broken shells or corals, with a loose open mat of fibers mingled with the surface material-and these groups of plants may come ashore in considerable masses inextricably en- tangled below, free enough above. As to habit, Figure la shows a portion of a clump with the loosely en- tangled base below, and it is also an example of the habit where no well-defined axes develop. In contrast, Figure Ib shows a portion of a colony with a densely felted base and conspicuous erect axes. Unfortunately, collectors commonly only mount por- tions of their plants, and representative bases are sel- dom seen in herbaria. There is a histological character available which can be used, but requires the utmost care in manipulation. Freehand sections should be cut from dried material, or of material in fluid preserva- tive after partial hardening in alcohol, and the part selected should be from a main stem near the middle of the plant, because if too young the structures will not have matured, and if too near the base the medulla will be found to be, for mechanical reasons, greatly compacted. When this is skillfully done and good sec- tions expanded in water with a little heat, the medulla should be examined closely. It will be found that strong filaments run lengthwise of the plant, sometimes singly, but varying greatly in number. When few they stand out spectacularly, but when more numerous some are smaller than others and less distinct. They are thin- walled at first near branchlet apices, but later the walls 12 become exceedingly thick and refractive. Figure 2a shows the aspect in transection, Figure 26 that in longi- section. In the latter the short intercommunicating spurs from these thick filaments appear, and also the irregular, very slender thin-walled filaments which make up the bulk of the medullary tissue. Near the apices the short spur fiLiments are very distinctive as alternate single-celled projections from the long main filaments. In contrast the northern counterpart Agardhiella lacks these continuous longitudinal filaments, though in transection some briefly swollen filaments or anasto- moses may look very like them, but in longisection their nature is clear. The branches are often coarser and may reach 4 mm in diameter, the plant bases are not widely entangled and the tetrasporangia are larger. Its south- ern range limits seem to be Florida and Texas, for SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY examples : FLORIDA, Palm Beach County, Jupiter Inlet, Mrs. G. A. Hall, Phyc. Bor.-Amer. I396 (NY), Levy Go., Cedar Keys, M. A. Howe 6884 (NY). TEXAS, Galveston County, Galveston Bay, C. E. Burt s. n. (UM) . I refer to microscopic differences between the south- ern and northern plants with some misgivings, since the observations were made upon herbarium material. Measurements of tetrasporangia in a few samples of northern material under the same treatment accorded those from the West Indies gave measurements of (37)-46-60-(78) p dim., (69)-73-92-(110) p in length, so that a more extended series might confirm that they are about twice as large. The structure of the cystocarp in New England material has long been well known (Kylin 1928). All too few specimens of the West Indian plants with cystocarps have been avail- FIGURE 2.-Agardhiella tenera (J. Agardh) Schmitz: a, transection of main axis, details only partly filled in, showing cortical structure and large and small filaments of the medulla (plant from Costa Rica); b, partial longisection of the medulla, showing large and small filaments, with the lateral branches from the large ones connecting with others (plant from Costa Rica). NUMBER 3 13 p. 26, pl. 74) reintroduced Rhabdonia baileyi with a description, ascribing it to Harvey, with its range the Atlantic coast of North America, and a little later (1868, p. 27, pl. 75) described as new Sphaerococcus tenuis from the Bahamas. His drawing of the axis structure of S. tenuis is incorrect, for by the kindness of Dr. J. Th. Koster and Dr. W. F. Prud?homme van Reine of the Rijksherbarium, Leiden, I was able to section a fragment of the type and found it to corre- spond structurally to that of other West Indian speci- mens of Agardhiella. Agardh later (1876, p. 592) rein- troduced the concept of a mainland range, including in synonymy Solieria chordalis Harvey non C. Agardh. Schmitz (1889, p. 371) mentions Agardhiella as a new genus and cites A. tenera as formerly in Rhabdonia, but gives no generic diagnosis, correcting this much later ( 1896, p. 371), though not citing the place of publication in Rhabdonia or Gigartina. Farlow in his first substantial listing of American marine algae ( 1873, p. 289) listed Solieria chordalis from southern Massa- chusetts and Long Island while later (1875, p. 368), retaining our plant in Rhabdonia, he assigned no lo- cality, but the next year accepted the range as Cape Cod southward and the West Indies (1876, p. 698) continuing this in his New England text (1881, p. 159). Thus the pattern for the customary American treatment was set. DeToni (1897, p. 322) accepted Agardhiella with A. tenera (J. Agardh) Schmitz as the . His description ?Frons a radice fibrczsa surgens . . .? fits our West Indian plant very well, but he adopts the wider range for the species. Kylin (1928, p. 67) described the structure of the Massachusetts material, though he later recognized (1932, p. 16) that the type of the species came from the West Indies, without changing his descriptions. In short, if one accepts the West Indian area as the type district and the plants as I have described them as typical, then the northern materials described in the literature (as referred to in Taylor 1962, p. 267), and with representative specimens mentioned earlier, must be distinguished by their own name, for which the best available seems to be Agardhiella baileyi (Ham. ex Kutz) W. R. Taylor n. comb. (= Rhabdonia baileyi Harvey ex Kutzing 1866, p. 26). The lectotype should be the specimen illustrated by Kutzing (1866, pl. 74, figs. c, d) from Greenport, Suffolk County, on the northeastern end of Long Island, New York. This is, in able, and of course they had been dried. While the sections made were far from good, it appeared that the carpospore mass was surrounded by a sheath of fila- ments, varying from subst cystocarps, while rare to scarce trabeculae composed of single filaments penetrated from this sheath into the carposporangial mass. This seemed to be hollow, with the more mature carposporangia separated from a slender stalklike cell by a less mature sporangial rudi- ment. This looked more like Kylin?s figure of Solieria (1956, fig. 207D) than like Agardhiella (Taylor 1962, pl. 59, fig. 9) as drawn from New England material. If this is confirmed, it is doubtful that the northern and southern plants attributed thus far to Agardhiella tenera can be kept in the same genus. It has been many years since the senior author first suspected that plants from the West Indies ascribed to Agardhiella tenera differed from those found on the New England coast. Until the present he has not had occasion to study their structure comparatively, or to trace the significant records of the species from various Iatitudes in the literature. J. G. Agardh described Gigurtina tenera (184,1, p. 18) from the warmer coasts of North America and the West Indies. Bailey (1848, p. 39) lists Rhabdonia baileyi as a Harveyan manu- script name, the plants from Fort Hamilton, Staten Island and Long Island, New York. Ku tzing ( 1849, p. 777) presented Sphaerococcus tener from the West Indies with Agardh?s name in synonymy. Agardh (1852, p. 353) shifted his plant to Rhabdonia with G. tenera and S. tener as synonyms, limiting the distri- bution to the West Indies, and specifically mentioning Haiti, Puerto Rico, and St. Crobc, but not indicating which specimens he had before him in 1841, though some he surely did. Harvey (1853, p. 122) assigned plants to Solieria chordalis J. Agardh, with a range from Cape Cod to Key West, Florida, which are clearly the northern Agardhiella (plate 23A), while he men- tions R. baileyi as undescribed, and assigns it to S. chordalis with reservations. That he recognized dif- ferences between the northern and southern plants is not only clear from his text (1853, p. 122), but in his Colombia paper (1861, p. 177) he lists S. chordalis as extra-tropical and R. tenera as tropical and present at Cartajena. Nevertheless he labeled Key West material (Harvey 40 at NY) as R. baileyi which seems on struc- tural grounds to be of the West Indian type and so not like that of Long Island, New York. Ku tzing (1866, 14 SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY Family PHYLLOPHORACEAE "Gymnogongrus grifithsiae (Turner) Martius Gymnogongrus tenuis (J. Agardh) J. Agardh St. Joseph: 4, 67-404 p.p. St. George: 3, 67-351, very common on the upper inter- tidal parts of rocks. St. Paul: SBW-27871, between Layou and Goodwill; 1, 67-326, occasional on boulders over black sand. St. Joseph: 4, 67-380C, in mats of algae drifted ashore, but dwarf. St. Mark: 6, R-283, on the reef at 6-12 dm depth. Grieve (1909, p. 10) reports this and the vars. angustata J. Agardh and breuifolia Holmes without listing definite stations. The record specimens under the varietal names do not seem distinctive, simply being rather small. the Kutzing herbarium at Le iden, designated no. 37 from Bailey. I have seotioned a fragment of it by the kindness of the curator, Dr. W. F. Prud'homme van Reine, and it shows clearly the thallus and cystocarp structure which characterize the New England plant we have been calling A. tenera. A Harveyan specimen from New York in the J. G. Agardh herbarium at Lund under the early designation of Solieria chordalis (no. 34490) is the characteristic plant as found in open water from Long Island and the southern shores of Cape Cod, as is one from Greenport (no. 34492) which Harvey may very well have received from Bailey and sent to Agardh. Through the very great kindness of Dr. 0. Almborn, Keeper Olf the Herbarium in the Universitets Botaniska Museum, Lund, I have been able to examine the Rhab- donia tenera specimens in Agardh's herbarium. Unfor- tunately, almost all are undated and lack more or less of the essential data. These have now been examined histologically, however, and most can clearly be as- signed to Rhabdonia baileyi (of the earlier terminol- ogy) or to Agardhiella tenera of warmer seas, leaving a very few uncertain ones which may belong to a third very soft species. When Agardh (1852) clarified his concept of the range of his R. tenera he mentioned Haiti, Puerto Rico, and St. Croix as sources. I was unable to get satisfactory sections of the specimens from Haiti and St. Croix now in the herbarium and they lacked the distinctive basal parts, but those from Puerto Rico (ex herb. Binder) could be studied with confi- dence and agreed with what I found in more recent material scheduled aibove. Therefore I suggest that the latter specimen retaining the base (no. 34480) be designated the lectotype for Gigartina tenera J. Agardh (1841, p. 18), later designated Rhabdonia tenera (J. Agardh) J. Agardh, and currently called Agardhiella tenera (J. Agardh) Schmitz. Family HYPNEACEAE *Hypnea spinella (C. Agardh) Ku tzing St. Joseph: 4, 67-402, forming mats on the rocks in shallow water. St. Joseph: SBW-27854, south of Mero; 2, 67-345, com- mon on stones in shallow water. St. John: 8, 67-470, frequent in similar situations. St. Andrew: 12, R-250, R-253, R-256A, locally common on the reef and over the sandy bottom in shallow water. *Hypnea musciformis (Wulfen) Lamouruux Order RHODYMENIALES Family RHODYMENIACEAE 'Botryocladia occidentalis (Borgesen) Kylin St. Andrew: 11, R-Z93, locally common at 6-12 dm depth. Family CHAMPIACEAE *Coelothrix irregularis (Harvey) Borgesen Champia paruula (C. Agardh) Harvey St. George: 3,67-354, washed ashore on the rocks. St. Andrew: 12, R-237A. Order CERAMIALES Family CERAMIACEAE * Wrangelia argus Montagne St. John: 9, 67-497, common on rocks along the beach. St. Mark: 6, 67-424, R-304, on rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head and on the reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Luke: 5,67-419, locally common on rocks. St. Andrew: 11, 67-572 ( ?), drifted ashore as epiphytic on Gracilaria. St. Paul: 1, 67-361, frequent as drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 4, 67-384, frequent in the drift. St. Andrew: 11, R-190, mixed with other small algae. St. Mark: 6, R-296, on the south side, common at depths of 9-30 dm. St. Joseph: SBW-27856, south of Mero; 2,67441; SBW- 27868, on rocks somewhat below low tide level between Layou and Goodwill. St. Andrew: 11, 67-586, drifted ashore; 12, R-206, R-221, very common high on the reef and in tidepools. St. Mark: 6, 674394, on the rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head. *Spyridia aculeata (Schimper) Kutzing St. Joseph: 4,67406, on rocks in shallow water. *Ccramiuin subtile J. Agardh *Ceramiu,m nitens (C. Agardh) J. Agardh Centroceras clauulatum (C. Agardh) Montagne NUMBER 3 15 Family RHODOMELACEAE "Falkenbergia hillebrandii (Bornet) Falkenberg St. Andrew: 11, 67-528, among other algae attached to the rocks beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. St. Joseph: 4, 67-403, attached to rocks along the shore. St. Mark: 6, 67427, dwarf, on rocks along the penin- sula to Scotts Head. St. Joseph: 4, 67-400, attached to rocks along the shore. St. Andrew: 12, R-244, where intertidal on cobbles, and R-249 on the inshore reef and its vicinity (both det. G. W. Hollenberg) . St. Andrew: 12, R-245, abundant on cobbles in shallow water. St. David: 7, 67-459, at a high intertidal level on the boulders. St. Andrew: 12, R-251. St. Joseph: 2, R-316. St. Andrew: 11, 67539, R-177, common as attached to rocks beyond the inshore reef at 6-12 dm depth. SeemingIy not widespread on Dominica. St. Andrew: 11, 67-574, drifted ashore; 12, R-230B, on the edge of the reef at 6-12 dm depth; R-210, on the reef at Pointe La Soie. St. Andrew: 11, 67-549, R-192, abundant attached high in the intertidal zone on the inner reef. This is another of the usually ubiquitous species of the upper intertidal zone seldom collected on this visit. It is commonly very stunted and loaded with epiphytes and, thus concealed, doubtless widespread about the island. St. Andrew: 12, R-248, abundant on Pterocarpus roots. St. Mark: 6, R307A, on the offshore reef. St. Andrew: 11, 67-556, drifted ashore. 12, R-230A, frequent at the reef edge to 3 dm depth. "Vidalia obtusiloba (Mertens) J. Agardh St. Andrew: 11,67-582, drifted ashore. *Enantiocladia duperreyi (C. Agardh) Falkenberg St. Paul: 1, 67-359, frequent as drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 2, R-308; 4,67-382, drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 2, R-315, 67-346, on small rocks scattered over the black sand just below low tide line and to 12 dm depth; 4,67-391, on the submerged cobbles. This species as ordinarily encountered in very shallow water is pale yellow or nearly colorless; unless very promptly mounted or preserved it is liable to decay after collecting. St. Paul : Sb W-27863 between Layou and Goodwill. *Polysiphonia sphaerocarpa Borgesen "Polysip honai binneyi Harvey "Polysiphonia ferulacea Suhr "Bryocladia thyrsigera (J. Agardh) Schmitz YBryocladia cuspidata (J. Agardh) De Toni WBryothamnion triquetrum (Gmelin) Howe YBryothamnion seaforthii (Turner) Ku tzing *Digenia simplex (Wulfen) C. Agardh *Bostrychia riuularis Harvey *Herposiphonia secunda (C. Agardh) Ambronn "Amansia multifida Lamouroux * Ch ondria lit t oralis Harvey *Acanthophora muscoides (Linnaeus) Bory Acanthophora spicifera (Vahl) Borgesen St. Paul: SbW-27817 ca. 0.8 km south of the Layou River. St. Joseph: 4, 67-412. St. John: 9, 67-491, infrequent, but on rocks near the shore. Grieve (1909, p. 10, as A. thierii Lamx.) reports this with some doubt as to its identity and without a specific location. St. Andrew: 11, 67-547, 67-563, common as attached on the inner reef and drifted ashore. St. Joseph: 4, 67-417, attached to rocks in shallow water near high tide line. St. John: 8, 67-478, in similar situa- tions. St. Andrew: 11, 67-557, drifted ashore; 12, R-207, R-208, common on the reef. St. Mark: 6,67442, attached near high tide line to rocks along the peninsula to Scotts Head. This species is all but ubiquitous in exposed situations near high tide level on rocks, and when thus exposed to strong light its normal blackish-purple color does not develop, so that the plants appear bright greenish-yellow. St. Andrew: 12, R-234. A juvenile form with flat blades and axes. Grieve (1909, p. 11, as L. tuberculosa) lists this without recording a definite station. *Laurencia scoparia J. Agardh St. Andrew: 12, R-255, drifted ashore. *Laurencia intricata Lamouroux St. Andrew: 11, 67-546, 67-587, scarce, attached to the inner reef and drifted ashore. "Laurencia microcladia Kutzing St. Joseph: 4, 67-413, attached to rocks in shallow water. St. Andrew: 11, 67-588, drifted ashore. St. Mark: 6, 67-444, on the rocks of the peninsula to Scotts Head. *Laurencia corallopsis (Montagne) Howe *Laurencia papillosa (Forsskal) Greville Laurencia poitei (Lamouroux) Howe Literature Cited (For a more complete listing of publications referring to the distribution of West Indian marine algae see Taylor, 1960) Agardh, J. G. 1841. In Historiam Algarum Symbolae. Linnaea, 15: 1- 50, 443457. 1852, 1876. Species, Genera et Ordines Algarum . . ., 11. Sfiecies. . . . Floridearum . . ., 2(2) : 337-720. 1852. III( 1) : Epicrisis Systematis Floridearum, 3( 1) :i-vii+l-724. 1876. Continuation of the List of Localities of Algae in the United States. American Journal of Science, Bailey, J. W. 1848. 11, 6:37-42. Borgesen, F. 1913-20. The Marine Algae of the Danish West Indies. Dansk Botanisk Arkiv . . '., 1-3:228+504 pages, 435 figures. (For details see Taylor, 1960.) Collins, F. S., Holden, I., and Setchell, W. A. 1895-1910. Phycotheca Boreali-Americana (Exsiccata) . Fascicles 146 and A-E. Malden, Massachusetts. Sylloge Algarum . . ., 4( 1) : Sylloge Floridearurn, i-xx + 1-lxi + 1-388. DeToni, G. B. 1887. 16 Farlow, W. G. SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY Kylin, H. 1928. Entwicklungsgeschichtliche Florideenstudien. Acta Universitatis Lundensis, series 2, 24(4) : 1-127, 64, Die Florideenordnung Gigarthales. Ibid., 28(8) : 1-88, 28 plates, 22 figures. Die Gattungen der Florideen. xv + 673 pages portrait, 458 figures. Lund. figures. 1932. 1956, Maze, H., and Schramm, A. 1870-77. Essai de Classification des Algues de la Guade- loupe. xix + 283 + iii pages. Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe. Murray, G. 1888-89. Catalogue of the Marine Algae of the West Indian Region. Journal of Botany, British and Foreign, 26: 193-196, 1888; 27: 237-242, 257-262, 298-305, 1889. Repaged, bound, and reissued, 46 pages, plates 284-288, 1889. London. The Flora of the Island of St. Bartholomew and Its Origin. vii + 224 pp., frontispiece, maps. ( 1941 ) . Basse-Terre. 1951. La Flore de la Guadeloupe. Geographie Generale de la Guadeloupe et Dependences, I1 et 111. Geo- graphie Biologique, I. La Flore. 327 pages, 8 plates, 11 7 figures, 2 maps. Systematische Ubersicht der bisher bekannten Gat- tungen der Florideen. Flora, 72:435-456, plate 21. Schmitz, F. and Hauptfleisch, P. Questel, A. 1942. Basse-Terre. Schmitz, F. 1889. 1896. Rhodophyllidaceae, in Engler and Prantl, Die Naturlichen Pflanzenfamilien, I (2) : 366-382, fi- gures 222-227. Marine Algae of the Smithsonian-Hartford Expedi- tion to the West Indies, 1937. Contributions from the United States National Herbarium, 28: 549- 562, plate 20. Marine Algae of the Eastern Tropical and Sub- tropical Coasts of the Americas. ix + 870 pages, 14 photographs in text, 80 plates. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Marine Algae of the Northeastern Coast of North America. Edition 2, 2nd. printing, with correc- tions. ix + 5Od?pages, 60 plates. hn Arbor, Michigan. The Marine Algal Vegetation of St. Martin, St. Eustatius and Saba (Netherlands Wkt Indies). Dissertation, 120 pp., 20 figures, 10 plates. Utrecht. Taylor, Wm. Randolph 1940. 1960. 1962. Vroman, M. 1968. U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1970 0 - 365 - 747 1873. 1875. 1876. 1881. List of the Seaweeds or Marine Algae of the South Coast of New England. United States Commis- sion on Fish and Fisheries, Report on the Condi- tion of the Sea Fisheries of the South Coast of New England in 1871-72, 1 : 281-294. List of the Marine Algae of the United States with NoteS of New or Imperfectly Known Species. Pro- ceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, lO(11) :351-380. List of the Marine Algae of the United States. Report of the United States Commission on Fish and Fisheries for 1873-4 and 1874-5. Pages 691- 718. The Marine Algae of New England. Report of the United States Commission on Fish and Fisheries for 1879, Appendix A-1: 1-210, 15 plates. Feldmann, J. 1948. La Vegetation Marine des Antilles Franccises. Association Francaise pour PAvancement des Sci- ences, Congress de la Victoire, 3 : 585-586. 1909. Notes on Some Sea-weeds from the Island of Transactions of Grieve, S. Dominicia, British West Indies. the Botanical Society Edinburgh, 24( 1) : 7-12. Contributions la Flore Algologique des Antilles. Annales de Cryptogamie Exotique, 2:53-58, 9 figures. Hamel, G. 1929. Hamel, G., and Hamel- Joukov, A. 1931. Algues des Antilles Francaises (Exsiccata) . Fascicles 1-3. Paris. Harvey, W. H. 1853. 1861. -~ Nereis Boreali-Americana : 11, Rhodospermae. Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, 5( 5) : 1-258, plates 13-36. Algae, with notes by Arthur Schott. Report of the Secretary of War , . . for An Interoceanic Ship Canal Near the Isthmus of Darien. 36th Congress, 2d Session, Senate Executive Document 9, IX, Appendix B, Botany, pages 175-178. Hillis, L. Wl 1959. A Revision of the Genus Halimeda (Order Sipho- nales). Institute of Marine Sciences, 6: 321-403, 12 plates. Hodge, W. H. 1954. Flora of Dominica, B.W.I. Lloydia 17(1-3) : 1-238, 112 figures. Kutzing, F. T. 1849. Species Algarum. vi + 922 pages. Leipzig. 1866, 1868. Tabulae Phycologicae, 16:i + 35 pages, 100 plates, 1866; 18:i + 35 pages, 100 plates, 1868. Nordhausen.