Small sporophytes of Costaria costata in an intertidal pool at Carmel Pt., Monterey Co., CA, June 2014. |
Kelps are undoubtedly one of my favorite groups of plants –
“plants” in the broadest sense of the word since they belong to an order of
brown seaweeds (Laminariales) that are quite distinct evolutionarily from land
plants. Among the dozens of kelp species along the world’s coasts, Costaria costata is one of my favorite
species. It tends to be just rare enough that it is a pleasant surprise to find
it during a visit to the rocky intertidal, and it also has such a remarkable
and intriguing shape.
Like many of the smaller kelps that don’t form tall canopies
in kelp forests, the macroscopic stage of Costaria
consists of a single large blade. However, the blade is very distinct, making
the species easy to identify in the field. It has 5 raised ribs that run longitudinally
along the blade. In between these ribs, the surface of the blade is raised and
lowered in textured undulations. Sometimes the blades have holes in them and
oftentimes the end of the blade is tattered and torn from thrashing among the
rocks and surf. The blade of the plant is held to the rocks by a short stipe
and a holdfast of branching haptera that resemble roots, but the holdfast
function is largely for anchoring the kelp to the rocks. The blades can reach up
to 2-3 m in length. The stipes have a corrugated rather than smooth surface, a
feature that I think is unique among all the kelp species along the western US coast.
Costaria costata (right) and a related kelp, Dictyoneurum californicum (left), from Mendocino Co., CA, July 2008. Thecorrugated surface of the stipe is easily observed in this photograph. |
Costaria is an
annual like its cousin the sea palm that I highlighted in a previous post (Druehl
2000). As with other kelps, it has a microscopic gametophyte stage that grows
cryptically on the rocks. Only the large sporophyte is visible to the casual
observer, and being an annual it will most likely be easiest to find during the
summer. The sporophyte produces spores in the blade from summer to fall that
eventually make their way to the substrate to germinate into male and female
gametophytes.
Broadly speaking, Costaria
is reportedly distributed from southern California
through Alaska to northern Japan in the
northwestern Pacific. However, the actual site-by-site occurrence along the
coast is much more spotty. Unlike very common kelps such as Egregia menziesii or Laminaria setchellii, one won’t find it
at most stretches of rocky intertidal coastline. I have personally observed Costaria at Carmel
Point (just south of Monterey , California );
Glass Beach
(in Mendocino County , CA );
on San Juan Island , WA ;
at Botanical Beach
in southern British Columbia ;
and at a few other west coast locations. From herbarium records I’ve compiled
at regional museums (UC Berkeley, Humboldt State Univ., etc), other locations
where the species has historically been found include: the Monterey Peninsula;
Shelter Cove; Humboldt County; Sunset Bay and Newport, Oregon; Whidbey Island,
Washington; southeast Alaska; and Hokkaido, Japan. Skimming through my
herbarium notes, I haven’t seen any specimen records farther south on the US
Pacific coast than Big Sur ,
California .
Links to other web resources on Costaria costata:
-
The late Tom DeCew’s Guide at the University Herbarium,
UC Berkeley
-
British Columbia coastal biodiversity page by the Starzomski lab
-
Seaweeds of Alaska
on-line flora
References
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