Padina japonica explained

Padina japonica is a species of small brown alga found in the tropical and subtropical Indo-Pacific region.

Description

Padina japonica has a flat blade rolled into a circle. The upper surface is whitish while the underside is brown. It is similar to Padina australis but rather smaller and the blade is usually unsplit.[1] Another very similar species is Padina sanctae-crucis; the underside of the latter is more highly calcified, the oogonia and the tetrasporangia are large and globular rather than small and oblong, and there is a single row of tetrasporangial sori rather than the multiple irregular rows of P. japonica.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Padina japonica . Marine Plants of Hawai'i . Hawai'i Coral Reef Network . 19 February 2020.
  2. Ni-Ni-Win Win . Takeaki Hanyuda . Shogo Arai . Masayuki Uchimura . 2010 . Four new species of Padina (Dictyotales, Phaeophyceae) from the western Pacific Ocean, and reinstatement of Padina japonica . Phycologia . 49 . 2 . 136–153 . 10.2216/09-54.1 .