Acrocarpia robusta Womersley
Australian Journal of Botany 99 (1964)

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Conservation Code: Not threatened
Naturalised Status: Native to Western Australia
Name Status: Current

Scientific Description
John Huisman & Cheryl Parker, Monday 20 June 2011

Habit and structure. Thallus dark brown, 10–35(–45) cm long, with one to several primary branches from the holdfast, bushy above. Holdfast 0.5–2.5 cm across, conical, lacerate with short subdichotomous haptera in older plants; epilithic. Primary branches 10–25 cm long, 1–3 mm thick until near the apices, terete, straight, with tristichously arranged laterals and occasional secondary axes arising adaxially from young laterals, denuded below, with pointed branch residues 0.5–2 mm long. Laterals dense, 1–2 mm apart, 1–4(–6) cm long, with tristichously and spirally arranged ramuli 0.5–1 mm apart; ramuli once bifurcate near their base, 1–3(–4) mm long, 200–350 µm in diameter. Central medulla of elongate cells with abundant hyphae and a cortex of isodiametric cells with a surface meristoderm.

Reproduction. Receptacles developed from ends of upper ramuli, 2–5 mm long, 400–600 µm in diameter, pedicellate, torulose (especially when dried). Conceptacles crowded, bisexual, with a prominent basal columella bearing phaeophycean hairs, ostioles scattered; oogonia sessile, ovoid, 100–200 µm long and 80–l50 µm in diameter; antheridia sessile or on branched paraphyses, elongate-ovoid, 25–40 µm long and 7–10 µm in diameter.

Photo of Acrocarpia robusta Womersley

Distribution. From Cape Naturaliste to Israelite Bay, W. Aust.

Habitat. A. robusta is often common in the uppermost sublittoral on granite rocks.

[After Womersley, Mar. Benthic Fl. Southern Australia II: 364 (1987)]