Examination of type material, comparative studies on vegetative
characters and data from published accounts of sporangia, gametangia
and spermatozoids are used here to further develop and strengthen
generic and species concepts in Zonaria and Homoeostrichus.
Zonaria
is characterized by octosporangia which lack a stalk cell and occur among
whitish paraphyses, by the presence of cortical cells in indusiate
sporangial and oogonial sori, and by slightly elongate sterile cells bordering
the antheridial sori. Other characters (mucilage in sporangial
and oogonial sori, biflagellate sperm with a row of many tall spines along
the anterior flagellum) may also be diagnostic of Zonaria but
have not been demonstrated in the generitype. Eight species are retained
in
Zonaria. Generic placement of Zonaria stipitata, described
on
vegetative characters, requires confirmation. Homoeostrichus,
as typified by Homoeostrichus sinclairii, is defined
by the presence of brown
paraphyses in nonindusiate sporangial and oogonial sori and bordering
antheridial sori, a multicellular sporangial stalk, oogonia without a
stalk cell, and uniflagellate spermatozoids. Zonaria harveyana
and Homoeostrichus olsenii are similar in sporangial
structure, but they cannot
be assigned to either Zonaria or Homoeostrichus
as now defined and consequently are transferred to the new genus,
Exallosorus, as
Exallosorus harveyanus (Pappe ex Kützing) comb.
nov. and Exallosorus olsenii (Womersley) comb. nov.
Exallosorus is distinguished from
Zonaria and Homoeostrichus using
sporangial characters: tetrasporangia have a stalk cell and
are closely packed into indusiate sori which
lack paraphyses and mucilage. Problems in obtaining reliable species
identification for the five southern Australian species of Zonaria
are
partially resolved. This study demonstrates again the essential
contribution of reproductive characters to the definition of taxa and
supports the position that decisions to erect, subsume or transfer members
of the Dictyotales should be based on more than vegetative characters.