Pleurophycus gardneri sporophyte with Laminaria setchellii and other seaweeds on low intertidal rocks at Glass Beach, Fort Bragg, CA, April 2016. |
I came across a rare treat tidepooling earlier this month at
Glass Beach
in Mendocino County – Pleurophycus gardneri!
Pleurophycus is a
moderately-sized kelp, consisting of a single photosynthetic blade at the end
of a stipe than can be up to a half meter long (Abbott and Hollenberg 1976).
Like other kelps, it is attached to the rocks with a holdfast, a structure that
resembles roots. Pleurophycus lacks
branches or the pneumatocysts (floats) that are present in some other kelp species.
Its distinguishing feature for identification in the field is the presence of a
wide midrib on the blade with a ruffled blade surface immediately next to each
edge of the midrib. The species is perennial and deciduous with blades dying
back each year (Germann 1986, Lindeberg & Lindstrom 2010).
The species is
distributed from central California into Alaska (Silva 2009) but in my experience it is uncommon
in California ,
particularly in the intertidal zone where I stumbled across a single individual
in a narrow channel.
Western phycologists first collected the species from San Juan and Whidbey
Islands in Washington
state and from Alaska
in the late 1890s (Silva 2009). Setchell and Gardner (1925) described its
distribution from Alaska to Coos Bay , Oregon .
Decades later a large population was found in the low intertidal at Ft. Bragg
(Kjeldsen 1972) and the species was later discovered to occur subtidally off of
San Luis Obispo County
and Big Sur (Silva 2009).
For me, finds like this make an early morning rise to catch
the spring low tides well worth it. In fact, though I am not naturally a
morning person, I can’t say I ever regret a 4 or 5 AM wake up for a low tide
adventure along the coast. During intertidal exploration I often find something
new, but even when I do not, my curiosity and love of natural history is
re-invigorated by the cool salty air and the beauty and complexity of the rocky
shores of the Pacific.
References
Kjeldsen CK. 1972. Pleurophycis
gardneri Setchell & Saunders, a new alga for northern California . Madroño 21:416.
Lindeberg MR, Lindstrom SC. 2010. Field Guide to Seaweeds ofAlaska. Alaska Sea Grant College
Program, Univ. Alaska , Fairbanks .
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