Abstract
Recent collections of fertile Chondria tenuissima, the type species of the genus, and Chondria dasyphylla (Woodward) C. Ag. from European waters have clarified details of their morphology and reproduction. This has allowed more detailed comparisons with southern Australian material hitherto placed under these species and has shown that neither occurs on these coasts. Records of these species from other countries may thus be open to doubt. Ruthenium Red-positive cell wall thickenings are present in some populations of both species. In C. tenuissima the thickenings are thin and lenticular or band-like, occurring on both the upper ends and inner and radial walls of pericentral and subcortical cells. In C. dasyphylla the thickenings occur as band-like caps on upper ends of these cells. Older pericentral cells may also develop additional, separate thickenings on the inner and radial walls, and in cells near the base of the plant these become lobed. The production of an auxiliary cell after fertilization of the procarp has been observed in both species. However its purported absence in material of C. tenuissima examined by Phillips (1896, p. 19) is not discounted as this situation has been observed in a number of southern Australian species of Chondria in which the division of the supporting cell is delayed until after the diploid nucleus has been transferred from the carpogonium. This variation appears to be more common in the Ceramiales than previously realized, however it does not appear to be sufficient to invalidate Kylin's differentiation of the order.
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