| Rhodogorgonales | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification |
|
| Phylum: | Rhodophyta |
| Class: | Florideophyceae |
| Subclass: | Corallinophycidae |
| Order: | Rhodogorgonales |
| Family: | Rhodogorgonaceae |
| Genera | |
The Rhodogorgonales are an order of red alga, a sister group to the corallines. They are always thalloid and calcified; their calcification is very different from the corallines, as individual calcite crystals are deposited in the cell wall of specialised cells; this suggests that the evolution of calcification may have been independent from the corallines.[3] They have no fossil record.[4]
Unlike the corallinales and sporolithales, their closest relatives, these thalli are loose aggregations of hair-like cells, with the middle portion formed of rhizoid-like filaments. Spores are borne on the end of hair-like cells (cortical fascicles).[5]
Images can be seen in Acta Bot. Venez 29 (2). 2006. http://www.scielo.org.ve/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0084-59062006000200005&lng=en&nrm=iso&ignore=.html.
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