Detailed studies on the sporophytes and gametophytes of Dictyopteris
australis and Dictyopteris muelleri from Australia have demonstrated
the usefulness of several reproductive characters in species discrimination.
In D. australis, spherical sporangia that project above the thallus
surface and are clustered around reflexed bundles of paraphyses contrast
markedly with the angular sporangia of D. muelleri, which are
embedded in the thallus and are scattered in broad fertile zones on the
upper branches. In D. muelleri, tetrads of released spores enveloped
by the inner sporangial wall are temporarily retained above the thallus
surface on the ends of mucilaginous stalks. Sporangial stalks have
not been reported in any other species of the brown algae, although egg
stalks are produced by several fucalean species. Differences in
oogonial structure can also be used to distinguish D. australis
and D. muelleri. The spherical oogonia of D. australis,
which project above
the thallus surface, are conspicuously different from the angular embedded
oogonia of D. muelleri. Detailed comparative studies on other
species of Dictyopteris are now required to ensure that reproductive
characters are used not only to define species of Dictyopteris
but also
to effectively circumscribe the genus.