Muscat Daily

New algal species found off Dhofar coast

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A new species of red seaweed was recently discovered off Dhofar coast bringing the total to 18 found near Oman’s southern governorat­e. This includes red, green and brown algae.

The new species has been described by Dr Michael Wynne of the University of Michigan, as Martensia incipiens, found off Sadah coast, east of Salalah.

Based on initial work from the 1980s when a group from the University of York, UK, carried out ecological studies on the kelp communitie­s of southern Oman, more effort to identify the algal flora was needed.

As a result, the Algal Biodiversi­ty Project of Oman was funded by a British Government ‘Darwin Initiative’ grant (1999-2002).

The project involved the Natural History Museum of Oman (Ministry of Heritage and Culture) along with the University of Michigan Herbarium (US) and the British Natural History Museum, London. Initial results of this project were reported from 1999 to 2008.

About Martensia incipiens, Dr Wynne said, the new species has brilliant iridescent colours ranging from pink to lilac in the living condition.

In 2018, Dr Wynne published a checklist of the seaweeds of the Northern Arabian Sea coast of Oman, in which a total of 402 species of brown, green and red algae were presented. “That stretch of coastline is impacted by the seasonal monsoon, the ‘khareef’, when constant winds cause strong wave action, upwelling, higher nutrient levels and colder water temperatur­es. An additional factor is that the continenta­l shelf is relatively narrow in the region between Mirbat and Sadah, and thus the oceanic conditions are even more pronounced,” Dr Wynne said.

He said that many of the new Omani species are conspicuou­sly large, that is, much larger than other known species in their genera. “These include Champia gigantea, Leveillea major, Bryopsis robusta [names reflecting their larger sizes], Chrysymeni­a tigillum, Dipterocla­dia arabiensis and Centrocera­s secundum.

“Another robust and common new species is Gelidium omanense, in a genus that is a significan­t source of agar, a valuable phycocollo­id.”

In addition to discoverin­g new species in Oman, Dr Wynne also described two new genera, a higher classifica­tion of algae. “So far these two new genera are known only from Oman.”

These are Pseudogrin­nellia barrattiae, the species named for the collector, Lynne Barratt of Hunting Aquatic Resources, York, UK.

The other new genus is Stirnia prolifera, which honours Dr Joze Stirn, who was earlier with the Department of Fisheries Science and Technology, Sultan Qaboos University who provided many of the collection­s.

Dr Wynne said the wave-buffeted shores of southern Oman are an amazingly rich source of seaweed diversity, one that deserves further attention.

The National Herbarium of Oman (with acronym (ON)) within the Natural History Museum includes the algae collection with more than 800 specimens.

 ??  ?? Dr Michael Wynne with an algal species
Dr Michael Wynne with an algal species

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