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1925] Setchell-Gwdner: Melcmophyceae 711<br />

Growing in the upper sublittoral belt. Avalon, Santa Catalina<br />

Island, California.<br />

Setchell and Gardner, in Gardner, New Pac. Coast Mar. Alg. I,<br />

1917, pp. 388-390, pis. 34, 35.<br />

73. Sargassum Ag.<br />

Plants attached b}^ a more or less irregular, warty, solid, paren-<br />

chymatous base, or by numerous stolon-like growths from the main<br />

axis, at most but a few decimeters high ; frond variously branched, con-<br />

sisting of a main basal part, or stipe-like portion terete or slightly<br />

angled remaining short with transition region near the end, bearing<br />

few to many branches on all sides, alternately arranged ; these main<br />

branches more or less elongated, filiform, terete or slightly angled,<br />

more or less branched, developing short, flattened, generally more or<br />

less horizontal, sterile branches (leaves) with midrib and cryptosto-<br />

mata; the receptacles and vesicles, variously arranged and modified,<br />

developing in the axils of these leaves ;<br />

oogonia large, containing a single egg.<br />

Agardh, Sp. I, 1820, p. 1.<br />

plants monoecious or dioecious<br />

In treating of the species of Sargassum found within our territory,<br />

we are accepting the genus as established by C. A. Agardh in Species<br />

Algarum in 1820, following the arrangement and restriction of the<br />

species as proposed by J. G. Agardh in his Species Sargassorum, 1889,<br />

and further modified and amplified by A. Grunow in Additamenta,<br />

1915, 1916. There is still much need of further investigation of the<br />

species growing in the Gulf of California and around the islands in<br />

the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Mexico.<br />

Key to the Species<br />

1. Leaves on all orders of branches decompound 1. S. Palmeri (p. 712)<br />

1. Leaves simple 2<br />

2. Vesicles, leaves, and receptacles intermixed, forming a heteroclyte cyme.. 3<br />

2. Vesicles, leaves, and receptacles not intermixed, not forming a hetero-<br />

clyte cyme 6<br />

3. Receptacles two edged, apex and margin serrate-dentate. 5. S. Bryantii (p. 714)<br />

3. Receptacles terete 4<br />

4. Leaves slightly flattened to filiform 3. S. guardiense (p. 713)<br />

4. Leaves flattened, asymmetrical, dentate 5<br />

5. Vesicles and receptacles not spinose 2. S. acinacifolium (p. 713)<br />

5. Vesicles and receptacles more or less spinose 4. S. lapazeanum (p. 714)<br />

6. Receptacles ancipitally angulate, margins serrate-dentate, conceptacles<br />

on lateral surfaces 7<br />

6. Receptacles cylindrical, more or less papillate, conceptacles on all sides. 11<br />

;

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