Monoecious, bisexual and unisexual clones of Achnanthes longipes
were isolated from the Black Sea and studied in laboratory culture.
Clones differed in their growth characteristics: in monoecious clones
the cells formed tufted aggregations while in other clones they were
more dispersed. Bisexual and unisexual clones exhibited intraclonal (monoecious)
reproduction, but only at a very low frequency and
usually within a more restricted size range than in monoecious clones.
Interclonal crosses were made in all possible pairwise combinations.
Abundant auxosporulation took place in all crosses, except where unisexual
clones of the same sex were incubated together.
Auxosporulation was more vigorous and occurred over a wider size range
in
interclonal crosses than during monoecious reproduction.
Sexual reproduction is isogamous. In the commonest pattern of auxosporulation,
two paired gametangia each produce two gametes,
which fuse to give two auxospores. More rarely (9% of pairs), the
gametangia produce only one gamete apiece, and hence only one
auxospore. In addition, very small cells can enlarge vegetatively, although
genetic or cytological damage sometimes compromises their long-term viability.