A new species of Pyropia from the central coast of BC

Winter is a great time to view the diversity of foliose Bangiales on our shore. This is the time of year these foliose species complete their sexual cycle. Many of these delectable species, which include the seaweed wrap for sushi (also known as nori), grow on high intertidal bedrock in the dead of winter, where they are protected by winter storms. Unwary predators would be ripped from the shore by these rough conditions if they tried to feed on these tasty morsels.

Rocks with lichen

Photo by Sandra Lindstrom.

Although the species of Porphyra and their relatives have been well studied on the Pacific coast of North America for well over a century, application of molecular sequencing to these thin blades has revealed a surprising amount of cryptic diversity. One of the groups of species that has turned out to be especially rich in species in this region is the Pyropia lanceolata species complex. This group was the focus of work by S.C. Lindstrom and K.M. Cole in the early 1990s before DNA sequencing became common. Now that we have DNA sequences, we can recognize even more species in this complex. Recently we described three new species related to Pyropia lanceolata: two are restricted to California whereas the third occurs from northern California to the central coast of British Columbia.

Pyropia columbiensis holotype_

We now turn our attention to this third species. I first recognized it as distinct from collections made at Cape Mendocino in northern California in April 2008. Three years later I collected the same species at Hakai in August. Since this is normally a winter species, the summer specimen from Hakai was in very poor condition and could not be used to clearly characterize the species. A visit to Hakai in February 2014 provided abundant material of this previously undescribed species. Specimens occurring on rock at the south end of West Beach were used to describe the species as new to science. The species was named Pyropia columbiensis in honour of the 100th anniversary of the University of British Columbia herbarium, where the type and other specimens of this new species are housed. The name also seemed appropriate for the sister species of Pyropia montereyensis, which occupies the same niche as Py. columbiensis south of Cape Mendocino.

 

Further reading:

Lindstrom, S. C., and K. M. Cole. 1992. The Porphyra lanceolataP. pseudolanceolata (Bangiales, Rhodophyta) complex unmasked: recognition of new species based on isozymes, morphology, chromosomes and distributions. Phycologia 31: 431-448.

Lindstrom, S.C., Hughey, J. R., & Aguilar-Rosas, L. E. 2015. Four new species of Pyropia (Bangiales, Rhodophyta) from the west coast of North America: the Pyropia lanceolata species complex updated. PhytoKeys 52: 1-22. doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.52.5009