Gelidium maggsiae sp. nov. is described from plants found
in shallow subtidal maërl beds off the west coast of Ireland,
where it attaches to
detached coralline algae by peg-like rhizoids. Rhizines are more abundant
in the medullary region than in the cortex and erect axes
display a prominent central row formed by the axial and periaxial
filaments. Gametophytes are bisexual and protandrous and were found
only in culture. Post-fertilization and cystocarp development are
similar to that of G. pteridifolium and cystocarps are biloculate.
Tetrasporophytes are morphologically similar to
gametophytes; tetrasporangia are irregularly arranged in
pod-shaped terminally inserted
stichidia, borne on erect axes and arranged unilaterally. Gametangial
plants reproduced under short-day (8[ratio ]16 h) conditions at 20–25°C
in enriched media, but gametangial formation was independent of photoperiod
when plants were kept in unenriched medium. No
tetrasporophytic plants were produced from germinated carpospores, but
plants originally collected in a vegetative state formed
tetraspongia at 20°C, 16[ratio ]8 h. The validity of several characters
previously used in species delimitation within the Gelidiales is discussed,
and only cystocarp structure and the bisexual nature of the gametophyte
are considered to be reliable characters.