The marine red alga known as Laurencia obtusa var.
snackeyi (Weber–van Bosse) Yamada (Rhodomelaceae,
Ceramiales) is characterized as
follows: (1) production of 4 periaxial cells from each axial cell;
(2) a few, percurrent, terete, thick main axes arising from a single discoid
holdfast without stolon-like branches; (3) alternate-spiral
branching; (4) presence of longitudinally oriented secondary pit-connections
between contiguous superficial cortical cells; (5) absence of a
palisade-like layer; (6) absence of projecting superficial cortical cells;
(7)
absence of lenticular thickenings in the walls of medullary cells;
(8) parallel arrangement of tetrasporangia; and (9) presence of one corps
en
cerise per superficial cortical cell and trichoblast cell.
It differs from L. obtusa (Hudson) Lamouroux in the
absence of stolon-like branches
with secondary attachment discs and the presence of thicker axes. The
following binomial is proposed: Laurencia snackeyi (Weber–van
Bosse) Masuda, stat. nov. Halogenated secondary metabolites of this species
were investigated for samples from Vietnam and Malaysia.
The major metabolites of the Vietnamese sample are palisadin A and
aplysistatin, both sesquiterpenoids, whereas the Malaysian samples
contain these compounds along with another monocyclofarnesol-derived
sesquiterpenoid, 5-acetoxypalisadin B. L. snackeyi is also
characterized by this set of secondary metabolites.