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Article

Inventory of the Seaweeds and Seagrasses of the Hawaiian Islands

by
Alison R. Sherwood
1,* and
Michael D. Guiry
2
1
School of Life Sciences, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA
2
AlgaeBase, Ryan Institute, University of Galway, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Biology 2023, 12(2), 215; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12020215
Submission received: 4 January 2023 / Revised: 24 January 2023 / Accepted: 28 January 2023 / Published: 29 January 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Polynesian Seaweeds Biodiversity, Biogeography and Evolution)

Abstract

:

Simple Summary

This inventory represents the first complete inventory of seaweeds (benthic brown, red, and green algae) and seagrasses from the Hawaiian Islands. We present taxonomic records compiled from the literature which include many recent descriptions of new species. Taxonomic records are accompanied by additional information allowing an assessment of the degree of molecular confirmation: whether the record has been verified by a match to DNA sequences from a type specimen, topotype sequences, or regional DNA sequences. In addition, taxa that have been identified solely based on morphology are indicated. In the face of numerous threats to biodiversity in the coming decades, it is hoped that this inventory will provide baseline data sets against which future changes may be compared.

Abstract

This updated list is composed of a total of 661 records, which includes 71 brown algae, 450 red algae, 137 green algae, and three seagrasses, with an overall rate of endemism of 13.2%. Almost half (46.7%) of the Hawaiian records presented here are represented by at least one DNA sequence, while 16.3% are confirmed through a DNA sequence match to a topotype, and 6.7% are confirmed through a DNA sequence match to a type specimen. The data are presented in the context of the natural history of the Hawaiian Islands, which is heavily influenced by the volcanic hotspot origin of the archipelago in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, as well as the important cultural role of seaweeds and other marine plants in Hawai‘i, and the current threats to marine ecosystems, which include the introduction and proliferation of a number of invasive marine macroalgae.

1. Introduction

The Hawaiian Archipelago consists of eight major islands, together with numerous atolls and islets, positioned in the central North Pacific Ocean [1]. The islands were formed sequentially through hotspot volcanic activity on the Pacific Plate, such that islands to the northwest end of the archipelago are the oldest (i.e., Hōlanikū, or Kure Atoll, at over 28 million years [Ma]), and those at the southeastern end of the chain are the youngest notably Hawai‘i Island, at 0–0.6 Ma, with volcanic activity still producing new land [2]. The Archipelago extends for approximately 2400 km, and is extremely isolated, with the nearest continent (North America) being approximately 3900 km away [1].
The youngest and most southeastern islands of the archipelago, known as the Main Hawaiian Islands, are home to Hawai‘i’s permanent human population. The largest marine wildlife reserve in the world was established in 2006 to encompass the northwestern islands/atolls and surrounding waters of Hawai‘i (1,510,000 km2—approximately the size of Germany), named the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (PMNM). The largely uninhabited PMNM has deep cultural significance to Native Hawaiians, and research on the marine macroalgae from PMNM has indicated substantial undescribed biodiversity—e.g., [3,4,5,6,7,8]. Shorelines in Hawai‘i are largely determined by the geological processes that shaped the islands. Thus, initial volcanic activity yielded basaltic lava islands, and this feature still dominates the shorelines of Hawai‘i Island and nearby east Maui [9]. The gradual shifting of the Pacific Plate in a northwesterly direction, away from the volcanic hotspot, correlates with a slow geological degradation of the islands, with limestone caps, reefs, and sandy areas forming over time [9]; these features are progressively more prominent on the older islands.
The Hawaiian Archipelago extends from approximately 19° N (Hawai‘i Island) to 28° N (Hōlanikū), with the oldest Main Hawaiian island, Kaua‘i, positioned at 22° N [1]. Thus, the populated islands of Hawai‘i lie within the zone of the tropics, while many parts of PMNM are clearly subtropical by latitudinal definition, and their climate is generally considered to be subtropical [2]. The Hawaiian Islands experience two climatological periods annually, corresponding to a hot/dry season (May–October) and a cooler/wet season (November–April). Annual temperature variation is modest, with the capital city, Honolulu, experiencing an average annual temperature of 24 °C, ranging from 22.2 °C (February) to 25.8 °C (August) [2]. The surrounding ocean provides a strong buffer and has a moderating influence on air temperature; thus, although the Hawaiian Islands share approximately the same latitude as Cuba and Calcutta, India, the climate in Hawai‘i is not nearly as humid and hot; annual ocean temperatures range from 22.8 to 26.1 °C [2].
The Hawaiian Islands are well known as a location of high biological diversity and considerable endemism. Biogeographically, the Indo-West Pacific has had the greatest influence on the marine biodiversity of Hawai‘i, which is generally reported to have lower levels of endemism than the terrestrial biota, due to substantial levels of adaptive radiation in the terrestrial realm [2]. A 2003 compilation of the biota of Hawai‘i reported 578 seaweed species, of which 80 were endemic (13.8%), and 1197 species of marine fishes (153 endemic, or 12.8%), compared with 247 species of mosses (24 endemic, or 9.7%), 145 species of ferns (106 endemic, or 73.1%), 2142 species of angiosperms (896 endemic, or 41.8%), and 183 species of birds (63 endemic, or 34.4%), and with rates of endemism for most insect groups being much higher [10]. Sherwood [11] reported 2.3% endemism for the Hawaiian non-marine algal flora, as compiled from bibliographic records at that time.
An overview of the history of Hawaiian phycology was provided by Abbott [12], who described the key contributions to that point. The first photographic identification guide was published in 1979 [13]. Two books comprise the most up-to-date detailed flora of the Hawaiian Islands: Isabella Aiona Abbott’s 1999 Marine Red Algae of the Hawaiian Islands [12], and Abbott and John Huisman’s 2004 Marine Green and Brown Algae of the Hawaiian Islands [14], which are both based on morphological taxonomy. The 2007 publication by Huisman et al. of Hawaiian Reef Plants [9] united records of seaweeds and seagrasses and provided an updated photographic identification guide for the Islands, with information including the cultural relevance of algae, or limu. Studies in the early 2000’s began to examine Hawaiian seaweed systematics considering molecular data and phylogenetic reconstruction—a tool that has revolutionized understanding of algal evolutionary relationships worldwide. The higher-level taxonomy of many algal lineages has been clarified (e.g., order Peyssonneliales [15], order Sporolithales [16]), or, in some cases, newly discovered since that time (e.g., order Pihiellales [17], order Rhodachlyales [18]). Myriad changes at the lower taxonomic levels have also occurred, and these are, to the best of our abilities, reflected in this updated listing of Hawaiian marine algae and seagrasses.
Invasive seaweeds are now also common on some of Hawai‘i’s shorelines. Since the mid-20th century, macroalgae from elsewhere have arrived, either through hull-fouling, escape from aquaculture, or accidental introduction, and have made profound changes to some of the nearshore reefs of the Main Hawaiian Islands [9]. Acanthophora spicifera (M.Vahl) Børgesen is believed to have arrived via hull-fouling from a ship originating in Guam, while species such as Gracilaria salicornia (C.Agardh) E.Y.Dawson, Hypnea musciformis (Wulfen) J.V.Lamouroux, Eucheuma denticulatum (N.L.Burman) Collins and Hervey, and Kappaphycus alvarezii (Doty) L.M.Liao were probable escapees from aquaculture or industrial attempts [9]. Native or cryptogenic species are also known to be problematic in Hawai‘i—examples include the green seaweed Dictyosphaeria cavernosa (Forsskål) Børgesen in Kāne‘ohe Bay on O‘ahu, the green seaweed Avrainvillea lacerata J.Agardh [generally referred to as A. amadelpha (Montagne) A.Gepp and E.S.Gepp in the local literature], and the newly discovered red seaweed Chondria tumulosa A.R.Sherwood and Huisman, which is wreaking havoc at several atolls in PMNM [9,19]. A second species of Avrainvillea, A. cf. erecta A.Gepp and E.S.Gepp was also recently reported from urbanized estuaries of the Main Hawaiian Islands [20]. Impacts of these newcomers are variable, with some demonstrating clear and immediate negative impacts on the native flora and fauna (e.g., C. tumulosa), while others will need to be evaluated for a longer period in order to comprehend these effects (e.g., A. erecta).
Marine algae play an important cultural role to Native Hawaiians. Due to religious restrictions placed on foods that women could eat (ca. A.D. 1200), women became specialists of shoreline algae and invertebrates, which were available to them, and the Hawaiian term limu has come to mean “edible algae”, although the original term was somewhat broader and included some simply constructed corals, liverworts, mosses, lichens, and fungi [12]. Hawaiian names were applied to plants that could be used as medicine or food, or in other ways [21], and some of the best known of these practices are given by Huisman et al. [9]. Seaweed and algae research generally receives a very positive reaction from the present day population of Hawai‘i—as an example, Hawai‘i’s Governor (David Ige) proclaimed 2022 as “The Year of the Limu”, which is accompanied by numerous public events celebrating and educating about Hawaiian marine algae (https://governor.hawaii.gov/newsroom/dlnr-news-release-year-of-the-limu-recognizes-importance-of-indigenous-species-of-plants-and-algae/, accessed on 2 October 2022).
The objective of the current study is to compile and summarize records of seaweeds (and seagrasses, of which there are only a few) from the Hawaiian Islands, which will allow comparisons to other floras, and provide a point-in-time snapshot of current understanding of the flora. Despite many decades of research on the Hawaiian algal flora by a number of notable phycologists, and published inventories for more narrowly defined parts of the flora (e.g., [12] for Hawaiian marine red algae; [11] for the Hawaiian non-marine algae; [22] for marine algae of PMNM), no current inventory exists for Hawaiian marine macroalgae and seagrasses. We seek to rectify that through the present study.

2. Materials and Methods

An initial set of records was compiled from AlgaeBase (on 18 March 2022) as algal and seagrass taxa that included the Hawaiian Islands in their distribution. This initial list was then hand-curated to remove Cyanobacteria and non-marine records. Other records were added from the literature not included in AlgaeBase, such as from recent theses and dissertations, and from in-press manuscripts known to the authors. In particular, publications reporting DNA sequence data are included to provide further information on the level of confidence in molecular confirmation. A second AlgaeBase download was performed on 10 December 2022 to check for records added since the initial download. Entries include records from both the Main Hawaiian Islands (Ni‘ihau, Kaua‘i, O‘ahu, Moloka‘i, Maui, Lāna‘i, Kaho‘olawe, and Hawai‘i) and the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (Hōlanikū [Kure Atoll], Kuaihelani [Midway Atoll], Manawai [Pearl and Hermes Atoll], Kapou [Lisianski Island], Kamole [Laysan Island], Kamokuokamohoali‘i [Maro Reef], ‘Ōnūnui and ‘Ōnūiki [Gardner Pinnacles], Lalo [French Frigate Shoals], Mokumanamana, and Nihoa), as well as minor islands and islets (Figure 1).
The list includes taxonomic information for each record including major lineage (e.g., phylum), order, family, genus, and species (and, where appropriate, subspecific taxon) (Table 1). The table column “regionally reported as” is used to indicate instances where a different name is or has been used to refer to the taxon in the Hawaiian Islands and includes taxonomic synonyms as well as common and widespread misidentifications. Whether a taxon is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands is indicated (as yes, no, or maybe). Four subsequent columns give information about the degree of molecular confirmation (where present), and whether the taxon has been verified based on morphological comparisons: “Morphology” (identification is based on morphological examination), “Regional DNA Sequence” (identification based on one or more DNA sequences generated from Hawaiian material and compared to sequences from elsewhere), “Topotype Sequence Match” (sequences of Hawaiian material have been shown to reasonably match those from topotype material), or “Type Sequence Match” (sequences of Hawaiian material have been shown to reasonably match that of a type specimen for that taxon). Hawaiian sequences were considered to represent the topotype locality if they were from the same island. Finally, one or more representative references for each species record are listed (not a comprehensive list of all records), and a column for taxonomic notes is included. Taxa listed as doubtful records are still included in the totals presented, until such time as they are discounted as members of the Hawaiian flora.
As for any inventory, the current listing represents a point-in-time and will change as more new species and genera are described (we are aware of a number of these in progress at the time of writing but are not yet accepted for publication), and other kinds of taxonomic proposals (e.g., synonymies or removal of records) are put forward.

3. Results

A total of 661 marine algal and seagrass taxa are included in this Hawaiian inventory (Table 1, Figure 2). These records include 71 Phaeophyceae, or brown algae (representing 11 orders, 16 families, and 33 genera), 450 Rhodophyta, or red algae (23 orders, 58 families, and 197 genera), 137 Chlorophyta/Prasinodermatophyta, or green algae (7 orders, 23 families, and 41 genera), and 3 Tracheophyta, or seagrasses (1 order, 2 families, and 2 genera). The Hawaiian marine flora as currently inventoried is 13.2% endemic, with values of 33.3% (seagrasses), 2.8% (brown algae), 6.6% (green algae), and 16.7% (red algae).
The vast majority (99.5%) of these records are based, at least in part, on morphological identifications. Approximately 46.7% of the flora is represented by at least one DNA sequence generated from Hawaiian material, meaning that 53.3% of the flora remains to be characterized using molecular tools, at any level. Seagrasses have the highest percentage of the flora represented by at least one DNA sequence (66.7%, albeit only three taxa comprise this component of the flora), followed by red algae (53.8%), brown algae (32.4%), and green algae (30.7%). A total of 16.3% of the records in the inventory has been shown to have a reasonably close match to a topotype, with values ranging from 0% (seagrasses), to 8.8% (green algae), 16.9% (brown algae), and 18.7% (red algae). A relatively small percentage of records (6.7%) has been confirmed through a reasonably close match to a sequence derived from type material (which includes recently described species for which DNA sequence data have been provided as part of the description); these values range from 0% (seagrasses), to 4.4% (green algae), 5.6% (brown algae), and 7.6% (red algae).

4. Discussion

We present the first comprehensive inventory of Hawaiian marine algae and seagrasses combining both morphological and molecular data and provide data on the degree of endemism of the flora, as well as degree of certainty in identification for each record. Despite having several very thorough morphological compendia available for various lineages of the Hawaiian flora, no single compilation of species existed. The most recent compendium of the red, green, and brown marine algae of Hawaii reported a total of 512 species (343 red algae, 107 green algae, and 62 brown algae [12,14]), which compares with the 661 subgeneric taxa (450 red algae, 137 green algae, and 71 brown algae, plus 3 seagrasses) in our current inventory. With 47% of records represented by at least one DNA sequence generated from Hawaiian material, a large amount of survey work and inventory curation awaits additional sequencing efforts. However, much recent taxonomic and systematic revision has occurred for the flora, which further emphasizes the need for the present inventory. Future updates are certain as this work continues, particularly with respect to new species descriptions from the mesophotic flora.
Degree of confidence in identification is becoming increasingly recognized as an important part of reporting in taxonomic inventories, lists and checklists—e.g., [23]. Variation in confidence of identification is an unavoidable side-effect of combining records from historical sources, which largely relied on a strictly morphological identification approach, with more recent works that include DNA sequence comparisons. Moreover, interpretation of DNA sequence comparisons is being undertaken with a higher level of scrutiny than when the tool first become available to phycologists, when sequences deposited in public databases may or may not have represented the labeled taxon due to sequence quality issues or misidentification (which could be due to several factors, further described below). For example, highest confidence can be placed on an identification when one or more DNA sequences matches or nearly matches a sequence derived from type material of that taxon. These instances are rare given that most taxa are not represented by DNA sequences generated from their type specimens, but 6.7% of the records in the current inventory have indeed been verified at that level, primarily as a result of new species descriptions from the Hawaiian flora that include molecular characterization. The next highest level of confidence in identification stems from an often-used proxy for type sequences—topotype sequence data, or sequences derived from specimens collected from (or relatively close to) the type locality. Topotype sequences, however, may in fact be representative of other taxa that cohabit that locality, or other taxa found in nearby areas, if the topotype locality is interpreted too broadly. The third highest level of confidence in identification stems from sequences generated from regionally collected material that was morphologically identified as belonging to a specific taxon or had one or more molecular markers reasonably matching a labeled sequence from a public database of that taxon. Strictly morphological identifications may be reasonably accurate for some groups of marine algae and seagrasses but are known to be rife with potential for misidentification due to several factors.
Marine algal taxonomy traditionally relied upon comparison of morphological characters, which remains a critical component of marine macroalgal identification, but can have several disadvantages [24]. For example, features associated with sexual reproduction are often necessary to discern species. Yet, these can be missing from specimens.
Table 1. Inventory of Hawaiian marine macroalgae and seagrasses.
Table 1. Inventory of Hawaiian marine macroalgae and seagrasses.
Major Lineage (e.g., Phylum)OrderFamilyGenusSpeciesRegionally Reported As 1Endemic 2Morphology 2Regional DNA Sequence 2Topotype Sequence Match 2Type Sequence Match 2References 3Notes
PhaeophyceaeAsterocladalesAsterocladaceaeAsterocladon D.G.Müller, E.R.Parodi and A.F.PetersA. rhodochortonoides (Børgesen) S.Uwai, C.Nagasato, T.Motomura and K.KogameAsteronema rhodochortonoides (Børgesen) D.G.Müller and ParodiNYNNN[14]
DesmarestialesDesmarestiaceaeDesmarestia J.V.LamourouxD. ligulata (Stackhouse) J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[14,22]
DictyotalesDictyotaceaeDictyopteris J.V.LamourouxD. australis (Sonder) Askenasy NYNNN[9,14,22]
D. plagiogramma (Montagne) Vickers NYNNN[9,14,22]
D. repens (Okamura) Børgesen NYNNN[14,22]
Dictyota J.V.LamourouxD. acutiloba J.Agardh NYYYN[9,14,22,23]
D. bartayresiana J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[14,22]
D. ceylanica Kützing NYNNN[9,14,22]
D. ciliolata Sonder ex Kützing NYNNN[14,22]
D. flabellata (Collins) Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[14]
D. friabilis Setchell NYYYN[9,14,22,23]
D. implexa (Desfontaines) J.V.LamourouxD. divaricata J.V.LamourouxNYNNN[13]
D. sandvicensis Sonder NYYYN[9,14,22,23]
D. stolonifera E.Y. Dawson NYNNN[14,22]
Distromium LevringD. flabellatum Womersley NYNNN[9,14,22]
Lobophora J.AgardhL. obscura (Dickie) C.W.Vieira, De Clerck and PayriL. crassa Z.Sun, P.E.Lim and H.Kawai, L. variegata (J.V.Lamouroux) Womersley ex E.C.OliveiraNYYYY[9,14,22,25]Hawaiian specimens are not L. variegata, and are presumably now known as L. crassa [25]
Newhousia Kraft, G.W.Saunders, I.A.Abbott and HarounN. imbricata Kraft, G.W.Saunders, I.A.Abbott and Haroun NYYYY[9,23,26,27]
Padina AdansonP. australis Hauck NYYNN[9,14,22,28]
P. boergesenii Allender and Kraft NNYNN[22]
P. boryana Thivy NYNNN[14,22]
P. gymnospora (Kützing) Sonder NYNNN[14,22]
P. japonica Yamada NYNNN[13,29]
P. maroensis Ni-Ni-Win, I.A.Abbott and H.Kawai YYYYY[28]
P. melemele I.A.Abbott and Magruder NYYNN[9,14,22,23,28,30]
P. moffittiana Abbott and Huisman NYYYN[14,22,30]
P. sanctae-crucis Børgesen NYYNN[9,14,22]
P. thivyae Doty and Newhouse NYNNN[9,14]
Spatoglossum KützingS. macrodontum J.Agardh NYNNN[9,14]
S. solieri (Chauvin ex Montagne) Kützing NYNNN[13]
Stypopodium KützingS. flabelliforme Weber BosseS. hawaiiensis (Doty and Newhouse) I.A.Abbott, Zonaria hawaiiensis Doty and NewhouseNYYNN[9,14,22]
DiscosporangialesDiscosporangiaceaeDiscosporangium FalkenbergD. mesarthrocarpum (Meneghini) Hauck NYNNN[14]
EctocarpalesAcinetosporaceaeFeldmannia HamelF. indica (Sonder) Womersley and A.BaileyHincksia indica (Sonder) J.TanakaNYNNN[9,14,22]
F. irregularis (Kützing) Hamel NYNNN[14,22]
F. lebelii (Areschoug ex P.Crouan and H.Crouan) Hamel NYNNN[9,14,22]
F. mitchelliae (Harvey) H.-S.KimHincksia mitchelliae (Harvey) P.C.SilvaNYNNN[14,22]
Hincksia J.E.GrayH. conifera (Børgesen) I.A.Abbott NYNNN[22]
Pylaiella BoryP. littoralis (Linnaeus) Kjellman NYNNN[14]
ChordariaceaeKuetzingiella KornmannK. elachistiformis (Heydrich) M.Balakrishnan and Kinkar NYNNN[14,22]
Nemacystus Derbès and SolierN. decipiens (Suringar) Kuckuck NYNNN[9,14,22]
ScytosiphonaceaeChnoospora J.AgardhC. minima (Hering) Papenfuss NYYNN[9,14,22,31]
Colpomenia (Endlicher) Derbès and SolierC. sinuosa (Mertens ex Roth) Derbès and Solier NYYYN[9,14,22,32,33]
C. tuberculata D.A.Saunders NYNNN[9,14,22]
Hydroclathrus BoryH. clathratus (C.Agardh) M.Howe NYNNN[9,14,22]
H. tilesii (Endlicher) Santiañez and M.J.WynneH. stephanosorus KraftNYYNN[34]
H. tenuis C.K.Tseng and Lu Baroen NNYYN[34]
H. tumulis Kraft and Abbott NYNNN[9,14,22]
Petalonia Derbès and SolierP. binghamiae (J.Agardh) K.L.VinogradovaEndarachne binghamiae J.AgardhNYNNN[14]Hawaiian specimens reported as P. binghamiae are most likely P. tatewakii [31]
P. tatewakii Kogame and Kurihara YYYYY[31]
Pseudochnoospora Santiañez, G.Y.Cho and KogameP. implexa (J.Agardh) Santiañez, G.Y.Cho and KogameChnoospora implexa J.AgardhNYNNN[9,14]
Rosenvingea BørgesenR. endiviifolia (Martius) M.J.WynneR. intricata (J.Agardh) BørgesenNYNNN[9,14]
R. orientalis (J.Agardh) Børgesen NYNNN[9,14]
FucalesSargassaceaeSargassum C.AgardhS. aquifolium (Turner) C.AgardhS. echinocarpum J.AgardhNYYNN[9,14,22,35]
S. muticum (Yendo) Fensholt NYNNN[9,14]
S. obtusifolium J.AgardhS. hawaiiense Doty and NewhouseNYYYN[9,14,22,35]
S. oligocystum Montagne NYNNN[36]
S. piluliferum (Turner) J.Agardh NYNNN[22]
S. polyphyllum J.Agardh NYYYN[9,14,22,35]
Turbinaria J.V.LamourouxT. ornata (Turner) J.Agardh NYYNN[9,14,22,37]
RalfsialesMesosporaceaeMesospora Weber BosseM. pangoensis (Setchell) Chihara and J.TanakaHapalospongidion pangoense (Setchell) Hollenberg, Ralfsia pangoensis SetchellNYNNN[14]
M. schmidtii Weber Bosse NYNNN[38]
NeoralfsiaceaeNeoralfsia P.-E.Lim and H.KawaiN. expansa (J.Agardh) P.-E.Lim and H.Kawai ex Cormaci and G.FurnariRalfsia expansa (J.Agardh) J.AgardhNYNNN[9,14]
ScytothamnalesAsteronemataceaeAsteronema Delépine and AsensiA. breviarticulatum (J.Agardh) Ouriques and BouzonGiffordia breviarticulata (J.Agardh) Doty and I.A.Abbott, Hincksia breviarticulata (J.Agardh) P.C.SilvaNYYNN[9,14,22,32,33]
BachelotiaceaeBachelotia (Bornet) Kukuck ex HamelB. antillarum (Grunow) Gerloff NYNNN[14]
SphacelarialesStypocaulaceaeHalopteris KützingH. filicina (Grateloup) Kützing NYNNN[14]
SphacelariaceaeSphacelaria LyngbyeS. novae-hollandiae Sonder NYNNN[9,14,22]
S. rigidula KützingS. furcigera KützingNYNNN[9,14,22]
S. tribuloides Meneghini NYYNN[9,14,22,32,33]
SporochnalesSporochnaceaeNereia ZanardiniN. intricata Yamada NYNNN[14,22]
Sporochnus C.AgardhS. dotyi Brostoff NYNNN[14,22]
S. moorei Harvey NYNNN[14,22]
TilopteridalesCutleriaceaeCutleria GrevilleC. irregularis I.A.Abbott and Huisman NYNNN[14]
RhodophytaAcrochaetialesAcrochaetiaceaeAcrochaetium NägeliA. actinocladum I.A.Abbott Y (?)YNNN[12]
A. barbadense (Vickers) BørgesenAudouinella barbadensis (Vickers) WoelkerlingNYNNN[12]
A. crassipes (Børgesen) Børgesen NYNNN[38]
A. dotyi I.A.Abbott YYNNN[12]
A. imitator I.A.Abbott Y (?)YNNN[12]
A. liagorae BørgesenAudouinella liagorae (Børgesen) WoelkerlingNYNNN[12]
A. microscopicum (Nägeli ex Kützing) Nägeli NYNNN[9,12,22]
A. trichogloeae Børgesen NYNNN[12]
Liagorophila YamadaL. endophytica Yamada NYNNN[12]
AcrosymphytalesAcrosymphytaceaeAcrosymphyton SjöstedtA. brainardii Vroom and I.A.Abbott YYNNN[22,39]
A. taylorii I.A.Abbott NYYYN[12,24]
BangialesBangiaceaeBangia LyngbyeB. fuscopurpurea (Dillwyn) LyngbyeB. atropurpurea (Mertens ex Roth) C.AgardhNYYNN[12,22,24]
Pyropia J.AgardhP. acanthophora (E.C.Oliveira and Coll) SantiañezPorphyra acanthophora E.C.Oliveira and CollNYYYN[40]
P. vietnamensis (Tak.Tanaka and P.H.Hô) J.E.Sutherland and MonotillaPhycocalidia vietnamensis (Tak.Tanaka and P.H.Hô) Santiañez and M.J.Wynne, Porphyra vietnamensis Tak.Tanaka and P.H.HôNYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Pseudobangia K.M.Müller and R.G.SheathPseudobangia sp. UYYNN[24]
BonnemaisonialesBonnemaisoniaceaeAsparagopsis MontagneA.taxiformis (Delile) Trevisan NYYYN[9,12,22,41,42]
NaccariaceaeNaccaria EndlicherN. hawaiiana I.A.Abbott YYNNN[12]
Reticulocaulis I.A.AbbottR. mucosissimus I.A.Abbott NYYNN[9,12,24]
CeramialesCallithamniaceaeAglaothamnion Feldmann-MazoyerA. boergesenii (Aponte and D.L.Ballantine) L’Hardy-Halos and Rueness NYYNN[12,22,24]
A. cordatum (Børgesen) Feldmann-MazoyerCallithamnion neglectum (Feldmann-Mazoyer) M.J.WynneNYYNN[12,22,24]
Crouania J.AgardhC. attenuata (C.Agardh) J.Agardh NYNNN[22,43,44]
C. mageshimensis Itono NYNNN[9,12,22,45]
C. minutissima Yamada NYNNN[9,12,24]
Euptilocladia WollastonE. magruderi I.A.Abbott and R.E.Norris YYYYN[9,12,24]
Gymnothamnion J.AgardhG. elegans (Schousboe ex C.Agardh) J.Agardh NYYNN[9,12,24]
Ptilocladia SonderP. yuenii I.A.Abbott NYNNN[12,22]
Spyridia HarveyS. filamentosa (Wulfen) Harvey NYYNN[9,12,22,46]
CeramiaceaeAcrothamnion J.AgardhA. butlerae (Collins) Kylin NYYNN[12,22]
Antithamnion NägeliA. antillanum Børgesen NYYNN[12,22,24]
A. decipiens (J.Agardh) AthanasiadisA. ogdeniae I.A.AbbottNYYNN[12,22,24,47]
A. erucacladellum R.E.Norris YYYNN[12,24]
A. nipponicum Yamada and Inagaki NYNNN[12]
Antithamnionella LyleA. breviramosa (E.Y.Dawson) Wollaston NYNNN[12,22]
A. graeffei (Grunow) Athanasiadis NYNNN[12,22]
Ardreanema R.E.Norris and I.A.AbbottA. seriosporum (E.Y.Dawson) R.E.Norris NYNNN[12]
Balliella Itono and Tak.TanakaB. repens Huisman and Kraft NYYNN[12,24]
Callidictyon J.N.Norris and I.A.AbbottC. abyssorum J.N.Norris and I.A.Abbott YYNNN[12]
Callithamniella Feldmann-MazoyerC. pacifica I.A.Abbott and R.E.Norris NYNNN[12]
Centroceras KützingC. clavulatum (C.Agardh) Montagne NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
C. corallophiloides R.E.Norris YYNNN[9,12,22,24]
C. gasparrinii (Meneghini) Kützing NYYNN[48]
C. minutum Yamada NYNNN[9,12,22]
Ceramium RothC. aduncum Nakamura NYNNN[12,22]
C. affine Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[22]
C. borneense Weber Bosse NYNNN[12,22]
C. cingulum Meneses YYNNN[12,22]
C. clarionense Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[9,12,22]
C. codii (H.Richards) Mazoyer NYNNN[9,12,22]
C. diaphanum (Lightfoot) RothC. tenuissimum (Roth) AreschougNYNNN[12,22]
C. dumosertum R.E.Norris and Abbott NYYYN[9,12,22,24]
C. hamatispinum E.Y.Dawson NYNNN[12,22]
C. jolyi (Díaz-Piferrer) D.L.Ballantine and M.J.Wynne NYNNN[12]
C. macilentum J.AgardhC. mazatlanense E.Y.DawsonNYNNN[12,22]
C. nakamurae E.Y.DawsonC. hanaense R.E.Norris and I.A.AbbottNYNNN[12]
C. paniculatum Okamura NYNNN[12]
C. punctiforme Setchell NYNNN[12]
C. serpens Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[12]
C. tranquillum Meneses YYNNN[12]
C. vagans P.C.Silva NYNNN[12,22]
C. womersleyi R.E.Norris and I.A.Abbott YYYYN[12,22,24]
Corallophila Weber BosseC. huysmansii (Weber Bosse) R.E.Norris NYNNN[12,22]
C. itonoi (Ardré) R.E.Norris NYNNN[12]
C. kleiwegii Weber BosseC. apiculata (Yamada) R.E.NorrisNYNNN[12,22]
C. ptilocladioides (R.E.Norris and I.A.Abbott) R.E.Norris YYNNN[12]
Delesseriopsis OkamuraD. elegans Okamura NYNNN[12]
Gayliella T.O.Cho, L.M.McIvor and S.M.BooG. fimbriata (Setchell and N.L.Gardner) T.O.Cho and S.M.BooCeramium fimbriatum Setchell and N.L.GardnerNYYYN[9,12,22,24]
G. flaccida (Harvey ex Kützing) T.O.Cho and L.J.McIvorCeramium flaccidum (Harvey ex Kützing) ArdissoneNYNNN[9,12,22]
Ossiella A.J.K.Millar and I.A.AbbottO. pacifica A.J.K.Millar and I.A.Abbott NYNNN[12]
Perikladosporon AthanasiadisP. percurrens (E.Y.Dawson) AthanasiadisAntithamnion percurrens E.Y.DawsonNYYNN[12,24]
DelesseriaceaeBranchioglossum KylinB. prostratum C.W.Schneider NYNNN[12,22]
Cryptopleura KützingC. peltata (Montagne) M.J.WynneC. corallinarum (Nott) N.L.GardnerNYNNN[12]
Dasya C.AgardhD. anastomosans (Weber Bosse) M.J.WynneD. pilosa (Weber Bosse) A.J.K.MillarNYYNN[12,22,24]
D. atropurpurea Vroom YYNNN[22,49]
D. pedicellata (C.Agardh) C.AgardhD. baillouviana (S.G.Gmelin) MontagneNYYNN[22,24]Doubtful record. Detailed analyses may demonstrate this to be an undescribed species [50].
D. corymbifera J.Agardh NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
D. iridescens (Schlech) A.J.K.Millar and I.A.AbbottEupogodon iridescens SchlechNYYYN[9,12,22,24]
D. kristeniae I.A.Abbott NYYNN[12,22,24]
D. murrayana I.A.Abbott and A.J.K.Millar NYYNN[12,24]
D. villosa Harvey NYNNN[22]
Dotyella Womersley and ShepleyD. hawaiiensis (Doty and Wainwright) Womersley and Shepley NYNNN[9,12,22]
D. hawaiiensis var. clavata Hollenberg YYNNN[51]
D. irregularis I.A.Abbott NYNNN[9,12,22]
Haraldiophyllum A.D.ZinovaH. hawaiiense M.O.Paiano, Huisman and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[5]
Heterosiphonia MontagneH. crispella (C.Agardh) M.J.WynneH. wurdemannii (Bailey ex Harvey) FalkenbergNYYNN[12,22,24,47]
Hypoglossum KützingH. barbatum Okamura NYNNN[12,22]
H. caloglossoides M.J.Wynne and Kraft NYNNN[12,22]
H. minimum Yamada NYNNN[12,22]
H. rhizophorum D.L.Ballantine and M.J.Wynne NYYNN[12,22,24]
H. simulans M.J.Wynne, I.R.Price and D.L.Ballantine NYNNN[12,22]
H. wynnei I.A.Abbott YYNNN[12]
Malaconema Womersley and ShepleyM. minimum Hollenberg NYYNN[12,22,24]
Martensia K.HeringM. abbottiae A.R.Sherwood and S.-M.Lin YYYYY[6]
M. albida Y.LeeM. fragilis Harvey, M. flabelliformis Harvey ex J.AgardhNYYYN[6,9,12,22]Many records of M. fragilis and M. flabelliformis in Hawai‘i correspond to this species [6].
M. hawaiiensis A.R.Sherwood and S.-M.LinM. flabelliformis Harvey ex J.AgardhYYYYY[6,9,12,22]Many records of M. flabelliformis in Hawai‘i correspond to this species [6].
M. lauhiekoeloa A.R.Sherwood and S.-M.Lin YYYYY[6]
M. tsudae A.R.Sherwood and S.-M.LinM. fragilis HarveyYYYYY[6,9,12,22]Many records of M. fragilis in Hawai‘i correspond to this species [6].
Nitophyllum GrevilleN. adhaerens M.J.Wynne NYYNN[12,22,24]
Phrix J.G.StewartP. spatulata (E.Y.Dawson) M.J.Wynne, M.Kamiya and J.A.WestApoglossum gregarium (E.Y.Dawson) M.J.WynneNYNNN[12]
Schizoseris KylinS. bombayensis (Børgesen) Showe M.LinMyriogramme bombayensis BørgesenNYNNN[12,22]
Taenioma J.AgardhT. perpusillum (J.Agardh) J.Agardh NYYNN[12,22,24]
Vanvoorstia HarveyV. coccinea Harvey ex J.Agardh NYYNN[12,22,24]
V. spectabilis Harvey NYNNN[12,22]
RhodomelaceaeAcanthophora J.V.LamourouxA. pacifica (Setchell) KraftCladhymenia pacifica SetchellNYYNN[9,12]
A. spicifera (M.Vahl) Børgesen NYYNN[9,12,24]
Amansia J.V.LamourouxA. fimbrifolia (R.E.Norris) L.E.PhillipsMelanamansia fimbrifolia R.E.NorrisNYYNN[12,22,24,52]
A. glomerata C.AgardhMelanamansia glomerata (C.Agardh) R.E.NorrisNYYYY[9,12,22,24,52]A. daemelii (Sonder) J.Agardh should no longer be considered part of the Hawaiian flora; these specimens represent A. glomerata [52]
Chondria C.AgardhC. arcuata Hollenberg NYYNN[12,19,22,24]
C. dangeardii E.Y.Dawson NYYNN[12,19,22,24,53]
C. minutula Weber Bosse NYNNN[9,12,22]
C. polyrhiza Collins and Hervey NYNNN[9,12,22]
C. simpliciuscula Weber Bosse NYNNN[12,22]
C. tumulosa A.R.Sherwood and Huisman YYYYY[19]
Chondrophycus (J.Tokida and Y.Saito) Garbary and J.T.HarperC. cartilagineus (Yamada) Garbary and J.T.HarperLaurencia cartilaginea YamadaNYYNN[9,12,22,24]
C. dotyi (Y.Saito) K.W.NamLaurencia dotyi SaitoNYYYN[9,12,22,24]
C. succisus (A.B.Cribb) K.W.NamLaurencia succisa A.B.CribbNYYNN[9,12,24,53]
C. undulatus (Yamada) Garbary and HarperLaurencia undulata YamadaNYYNN[12,24]
Digenea C.AgardhD. cymatophila (R.E.Norris) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsAlsidium cymatophilum R.E.NorrisNYYYN[12,24]
Ditria HollenbergD. reptans Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22]
Epizonaria Díaz-Tapia and MaggsE. prostrata (Harvey) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsLophosiphonia prostrata (Harvey) FalkenbergNYNNN[12,22]
Exophyllum Weber BosseE. wentii Weber Bosse NYNNN[12]
Hawaiia HollenbergH. trichia Hollenberg YYNNN[12]
Herposiphonia NägeliH. arcuata Hollenberg NYNNN[12,54]
H. crassa Hollenberg NYNNN[12,54]
H. delicatula Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22,54]
H. dendroidea Hollenberg NYNNN[22,54]
H. dubia Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22,54]
H. nuda Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22,54]
H. obscura Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22,54]
H. pacifica Hollenberg NYNNN[9,12,22,54]
H. parca Setchell NYNNN[9,12,22,54]
H. secunda (C.Agardh) Ambronn NYNNN[9,12,22]
H. tenella (C.Agardh) Ambronn NYNNN[22,54]
H. variabilis Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22,54]
Janczewskia Solms-LaubachJ. hawaiiana Apt YYYYN[12,24,53]
Kapraunia Savoie and G.W.SaundersK. pentamera (Hollenberg) Savoie and G.W.SaundersPolysiphonia pentamera HollenbergNYNNN[12]
Laurencia J.V.LamourouxL. brachyclados Pilger NYYNN[9,12,22,24,55]
L. decumbens Kützing NYYNN[12,22,24]
L. dendroidea J.AgardhL. majuscula (Harvey) A.H.S.LucasNYYNN[9,12,22,24,55]
L. elegans A.H.S.Lucas NYYYN[55]
L. galtsoffii M.Howe NYYNN[12,22,24]
L. glandulifera (Kützing) Kützing NYNNN[12]
L. mariannensis Yamada NYNNN[12,22]
L. mcdermidiae I.A.Abbott NYYYN[9,12,24,55]
L. nidifica J.Agardh NYYYN[12,22,24,55]
L. obtusa (Hudson) J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[13,44]
L. subsimplex C.K.Tseng NYNNN[22]
L. tenera C.K.Tseng NYNNN[12]
Leveillea DecaisneL. jungermannioides (Hering and G.Martens) Harvey NYYNN[12,24]
Lophocladia (J.Agardh) F.SchmitzL. kipukaia Schlech NYNNN[12]
L. kuesteri I.A.Abbott, D.L.Ballantine and O’Doherty YYYYN[22,56]
L. trichoclados (C.Agardh) F.Schmitz NYNNN[22]
Lophosiphonia FalkenbergL. cristata Falkenberg NYNNN[12,22]
Melanothamnus Bornet and FalkenbergM. apiculatus (Hollenberg) Díaz- Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia apiculata Hollenberg, Neosiphonia apiculata (Hollenberg) Masuda and KogameNYNNN[12,22,57]
M. delicatulus (Hollenberg) HuismanPolysiphonia delicatula HollenbergNYNNN[12,22,57]
M. ecorticatus (R.E.Norris) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsFernandosiphonia ecorticata R.E.NorrisNYNNN[12]
M. hancockii (E.Y.Dawson) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia hancockii E.Y.DawsonNYNNN[12]
M. hawaiiensis (Hollenberg) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsNeosiphonia hawaiiensis (Hollenberg) M.-S.Kim and I.A.Abbott, Polysiphonia hawaiiensis HollenbergNYNNN[9,12,57]
M. nanus (A.J.K.Millar) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsFernandosiphonia nana A.J.K.MillarNYNNN[12]
M. polyphysus (Kützing) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsNeosiphonia polyphysa (Kützing) Skelton and South, Polysiphonia polyphysa KützingNYNNN[22]
M. pseudovillum (Hollenberg) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia pseudovillum HollenbergNYNNN[9,12,22,57]
M. quadratus (Hollenberg) HuismanPolysiphonia quadrata HollenbergNYNNN[57,58]
M. savatieri (Hariot) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia savatieri Hariot, Polysiphonia japonica var. savatieri (Hariot) H.Y.Yoon, Neosiphonia savatieri (Hariot) M.S.Kim and I.K.LeeNYNNN[12,22,57]
M. simplex (Hollenberg) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia simplex HollenbergNYNNN[12,22]
M. sparsus (Setchell) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia sparsa (Setchell) HollenbergNYNNN[12,22,57]
M. sphaerocarpus (Børgesen) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsNeosiphonia sphaerocarpa (Børgesen) M.-S.Kim and I.K.Lee, Polysiphonia sphaerocarpa BørgesenNYNNN[9,12,22,57]
M. tongatensis (Harvey ex Kützing) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia tongatensis Harvey ex KützingNYNNN[12]
M. upolensis (Grunow) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsNeosiphonia upolensis (Grunow) M.S.Kim and Boo, Polysiphonia upolensis GrunowNYYNN[9,12,22,24,57]
Micropeuce J.AgardhM. setosa I.A.Abbott YYNNN[12]
Neotenophycus Kraft and I.A.AbbottN. ichthyosteus Kraft and I.A.Abbott NYNNN[59]
Osmundaria J.V.LamourouxO. fimbriata (J.V.Lamouroux) R.E.NorrisVidalia fimbriata (Lamouroux) J.AgardhNYNNN[58]
O. obtusiloba (C.Agardh) R.E.Norris NYYNN[12,24]
Palisada K.W.NamP. crustiformans (K.J.McDermid) A.R.Sherwood, A.Kurihara and K.W.NamLaurencia crustiformans K.J.McDermidNYYYN[9,12,22,24,60]
P. parvipapillata (C.K.Tseng) K.W.NamLaurencia parvipapillata C.K.Tseng, Chondrophycus parvipapillatus (C.K.Tseng) Garbary and J.T.HarperNYYNN[9,12,22,24]
P. perforata (Bory) K.W.Nam NYNNN[22]
P. surculigera (C.K.Tseng) K.W.Nam NYNNN[22]
P. thuyoides (Kützing) Cassano, Sentíes, Gil-Rodríguez and M.T.FujiiLaurencia paniculata (C.Agardh) J.AgardhNYNNN[61]Doubtful record.
P. yamadana (M.Howe) K.W.NamLaurencia yamadana M.HoweNYYNN[12,22,24]
Phaeocolax HollenbergP. kajimurae Hollenberg NYNNN[12]
Polysiphonia GrevilleP. anomala Hollenberg NYNNN[12,57]
P. beaudettei HollenbergNeosiphonia beaudettei (Hollenberg) M.S.Kim and I.A.AbbottNYNNN[12,22]
P. exilis Harvey NYNNN[12,22]
P. homoia Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[12]
P. poko HollenbergNeosiphonia poko (Hollenberg) I.A.AbbottNYNNN[9,12,22,57]
P. profunda HollenbergNeosiphonia profunda (Hollenberg) M.-S.Kim and I.A.AbbottYYNNN[12,57]
P. rubrorhiza HollenbergNeosiphonia rubrorhiza (Hollenberg) M.-S.Kim and I.A.AbbottYYNNN[12,22,57]
P. saccorhiza (Collins and Hervey) Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22,57]
P. scopulorum Harvey NYNNN[12,22,57]
P. sertularioides (Grateloup) J.AgardhNeosiphonia sertularioides (Grateloup) K.W.Nam and P.J.Kang, P. flaccidissima HollenbergNYNNN[12,22,57]
P. subtilissima Montagne NYYNN[12,57,62]
P. triton P.C.Silva NYNNN[12]
P. tsudana Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22]
P. tuberosa Hollenberg YYNNN[12,22,57]
P. villum J.Agardh NYNNN[38]
Rhodolachne M.J.WynneR. decussata M.J.Wynne NYYNN[12,24]
Spirocladia BørgesenS. barodensis Børgesen NYYNN[9,12,24]
S. hodgsoniae I.A.Abbott YYYYN[9,12,22,24]
Symphyocladia FalkenbergS. marchantioides (Harvey) Falkenberg NYNNN[12]
Tayloriella KylinT. dictyurus (J.Agardh) Kylin NYYNN[12,24]
Tolypiocladia F.SchmitzT. glomerulata (C.Agardh) F.Schmitz NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Ululania K.E.Apt and K.E.SchlechU. stellata K.E.Apt and K.E.Schlech YYYYN[12,24,53]
Vertebrata S.F.GrayV. foetidissima (Cocks ex Bornet) Díaz-Tapia and MaggsPolysiphonia tepida Hollenberg, P. foetidissima Cocks ex Bornet, Neosiphonia tepida (Hollenberg) S.M.Guimarães and M.T.FujiiNYYNN[12,22,24]
Wilsonosiphonia D.Bustamante, Won and T.O.ChoW. howei (Hollenberg) D.Bustamante, Won and T.O.ChoPolysiphonia howei HollenbergNYYNN[9,12,24]
Womersleyella HollenbergW. herpa (Hollenberg) R.E.NorrisPolysiphonia herpa HollenbergNYNNN[12,22,57]
W. pacifica Hollenberg NYNNN[12,22]
W. setacea (Hollenberg) R.E.NorrisPolysiphonia setacea HollenbergNYNNN[12,57]
Xiphosiphonia Savoie and G.W.SaundersX. pennata (C.Agardh) Savoie and G.W.SaundersPterosiphonia pennata (C.Agardh) SauvageauNYNNN[12]
WrangeliaceaeAnotrichium NägeliA. secundum (Harvey ex J.Agardh) G.Furnari NYNNN[9,12,22]
A. tenue (C.Agardh) Nägeli NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Diplothamnion A.B.Joly and YamaguishiD. jolyi C.Hoek NYYNN[12,22,24]
Griffithsia C.AgardhG. heteromorpha Kützing NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
G. metcalfii C.K.Tseng NYNNN[12]
G. schousboei Montagne NYYNN[12,22,24]
G. subcylindrica Okamura NYYNN[9,12,24]
Haloplegma MontagneH. duperreyi Montagne NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Lejolisia BornetL. pacifica Itono NYYNN[12,22,24]
Monosporus SolierM. indicus Børgesen NYYNN[12,24]
Pleonosporium NägeliP. intricatum R.E.Norris YYNNN[12]
Ptilothamnion ThuretP. cladophorae (Yamada and T.Tanaka) G.Feldmann-Mazoyer NYNNN[12,22]
Spongoclonium SonderS. caribaeum (Børgesen) M.J.WynnePleonosporium caribaeum (Børgesen) R.E.NorrisNYNNN[12]
Tiffaniella Doty and MeñezT. saccorhiza (Setchell and N.L.Gardner) Doty and Meñez NYNNN[12,22]
Wrangelia C.AgardhW. dumontii (E.Y.Dawson) I.A.Abbott NYNNN[9,12,22]
W. elegantissima R.E.Norris NYYYN[9,12,22,24]
W. penicillata (C.Agardh) C.Agardh NYNNN[13]
ColaconematalesColaconemataceaeColaconema BattersC. corymbiferum (Thuret) Alongi, Cormaci and G.FurnariAcrochaetium corymbiferum (Thuret) BattersNYNNN[12]
C. hypneae (Børgesen) A.A.Santos and C.W.N.MouraAcrochaetium hypneae (Børgesen) Børgesen, A. seriatum BørgesenNYNNN[9]
C. nemalii (De Notaris ex Dufour) StegengaAcrochaetium nemalii (De Notaris ex Dufour) BørgesenNYNNN[12]Abbott [12] lists “A. nemalionis (DeNotaris ex Ardissone) Bornet”; the assumption in AlgaeBase is that she meant A. nemalii (DeNotaris ex Dufour) Børgesen. There is no taxon by the former name listed in AlgaeBase.
C. robustum (Børgesen) Huisman and WoelkerlingAcrochaetium robustum BørgesenNYNNN[12]
CorallinalesCorallinaceaeArthrocardia DecaisneArthrocardia sp. UYYNN[24]
Ellisolandia K.R.Hind and G.W.SaundersE. elongata (J.Ellis and Solander) K.R.Hind and G.W.SaundersCorallina elongata J.Ellis and SolanderNYNNN[12]
Jania J.V.LamourouxJ. micrarthrodia J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[9,12,22]
J. pedunculata var. adhaerens (J.V.Lamouroux) A.S.Harvey, Woelkerling and ReviersJ. adhaerens J.V.LamourouxNYNNN[12,22]
J. pumila J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[9,12,22]
J. subulata (Ellis and Solander) SonderHaliptilon subulatum (J.Ellis and Solander) H.W.JohansenNYYNN[9,12,22,24]
J. tenella (Kützing) Grunow NYNNN[47]
J. verrucosa J.V.Lamouroux nom. rejic. NYNNN[12,22]The status of Jania species in Hawai‘i requires intensive molecular study.
HapalidiaceaeChoreonema F.SchmitzC. thuretii (Bornet) F.Schmitz NYNNN[22,44]
Phymatolithon FosliePhymatolithon sp. UYYNN[24]
HydrolithaceaeHydrolithon (Foslie) FoslieH. boergesenii (Foslie) FoslieH. reinboldii (Weber Bosse and Foslie) FoslieNYYNN[22,24]
H. breviclavium (Foslie) Foslie NYNNN[13,63]
H. farinosum (J.V.Lamouroux) Penrose and Y.M.Chamberlain NYNNN[9,22]
LithophyllaceaeAmphiroa J.V.LamourouxA. beauvoisii J.V.Lamouroux NYYNN[9,12,22]
A. foliacea J.V.Lamouroux NYYNN[12,24]
A. fragilissima (Linnaeus) J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[13,22]
A. rigida J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[9,12,22]
A. valonioides Yendo NYYNN[12,22,24]
Lithophyllum PhilippiL. ganeopsis W.H.Adey, R.A.Townsend and Boykins YYNNN[38,64]
L. insipidum W.H.Adey, R.A.Townsend and Boykins NYYYN[24,65]
L. kotschyanum Unger NYYNN[9,13,24,65]
L. prototypum (Foslie) FoslieTenarea tessellata (Lemoine) Littler ex Adey et al., Titanoderma tessellatum (Me.Lemoine) Woelkerling, Y.M.Chamberlain and P.C.SilvaNYNNN[66,67]Doubtful record
L. subreduncum Foslie YYYYY[68,69]According to Basso et al. [69], known only from the type locality and other reports (from AlgaeBase) require verification.
MastophoraceaeMastophora DecaisneM. pacifica (Heydrich) Foslie NYNNN[9,70]
M. rosea (C.Agardh)Setchell NYNNN[22,43]
Metamastophora SetchellMetamastophora sp. UYYNN[24]
MesophyllumaceaeMesophyllum Me.LemoineM. erubescens (Foslie) Me.Lemoine NYYYN[65,71]
M. mesomorphum (Foslie) W.H.Adey NYNNN[13]
M. syrphetodes W.H.Adey, R.A.Townsend and Boykins NYNNN[64]
PorolithaceaeDawsoniolithon Caragnano, Foetisch, Maneveldt and PayriD. conicum (E.Y.Dawson) Caragnano, Foetisch, Maneveldt and PayriPneophyllum conicum (E.Y.Dawson) Keats, Y.M.Chamberlain and M.BabaNYYNN[9,65]
Porolithon FoslieP. gardineri (Foslie) FoslieHydrolithon gardineri (Foslie) Verheij and Prud’hommeNYYNN[9,13,24,65]
P. onkodes (Heydrich) FoslieHydrolithon onkodes (Heydrich) Penrose and WoelkerlingNYYNN[9,24,29,72,73]
SpongitidaceaeNeogoniolithon Setchell and L.R.MasonN. brassica-florida (Harvey) Setchell and L.R.MasonN. frutescens (Foslie) Setchell and L.R.MasonNYYNN[13,22,24]
ErythropeltalesErythropeltales incertae sedisMadagascaria J.A.West and N.KikuchiMadagascaria sp. UYYNN[24]
ErythotrichiaceaeErythrotrichia AreschougE. carnea (Dillwyn) J.Agardh NYNNN[12,22]
Sahlingia KornmannS. subintegra (Rosenvinge) Kornmann NYYNN[9,24]
GelidialesGelidiaceaeGelidium J.V.LamourouxG. arenarium Kylin NYNNN[38]
G. crinale (Hare ex Turner) Gaillon NYYNN[12,24]
G. pluma Bornet ex N.H.Loomis YYYYN[9,12,24]
G. pusillum (Stackhouse) Le Jolis NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
G. pusillum var. pacificum W.R.Taylor NYNNN[74]
G. reediae N.H.Loomis YYYNN[12,24]
G. reptans (Suhr) Kylin NYNNN[38]
GelidiellaceaeGelidiella Feldmann and G.HamelG. acerosa (Forsskål) Feldmann and Hamel NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
G. fanii S.- M.Lin NYYYN[75,76]
G. machrisiana E.Y.Dawson NYYNN[12,24]
Millerella G.H.Boo and S.M. BooM. myrioclada (Børgesen) G.H.BooGelidiella myrioclada (Børgesen) Feldmann and HamelNYNNN[12,22]
Parviphycus SantelicesP. adnatus (E.Y.Dawson) B.Santelices NYNNN[77]
P. antipae (Celan) B.SantelicesGelidiella antipae CelanNYNNN[12]
P. womersleyanus (Kraft and I.A.Abbott) B.SantelicesGelidiella womersleyana Kraft and I.A.AbbottYYNNN[12]
PterocladiaceaePterocladiella B.Santelices and HommersandP. bulbosa (N.H.Loomis) SantelicesPterocladia bulbosa N.H.LoomisNYNNN[12]
P. caerulescens (Kützing) Santelices and HommersandPterocladia caerulescens (Kützing) SantelicesNYYNN[9,12,24]
P. caloglossoides (M.Howe) Santelices NYNNN[12,22]
P. capillacea (S.G.Gmelin) Santelices and HommersandPterocladia capillacea (S.G.Gmelin) BornetNYYNN[9,12,22]
GigartinalesCaulacanthaceaeCaulacanthus KützingC. ustulatus (Turner) Kützing NYYNN[12,22,24]
ChondrymeniaceaeDissimularia G.T.Kraft and G.W.SaundersD. dactylocarpa G.T.Kraft and G.W.Saunders NYYYY[78]
D. umbraticola (E.Y.Dawson) G.T.Kraft and G.W.SaundersCryptonemia umbraticola E.Y.DawsonNYNNN[9,12]
CubiculosporaceaeCubiculosporum KraftC. koronicarpis Kraft NYNNN[12]
CystocloniaceaeCalliblepharis KützingC. saidana (Holmes) M.Y.Yang and M.S.KimHypnea saidana HolmesNYYNN[9]Doubtful record.
C. yasutakei M.O.Paiano and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[79]
Hypnea J.V.LamourouxH. caraibica Nauer, Cassano and M.C.OliveiraH. musciformis (Wulfen) J.V.Lamouroux (in part?)NYYYY[9,12,80]Nauer et al. [80] state that the alga known in Hawai‘i as H. musciformis is not the same as that species, and described H. caraibica, to which it belongs.
H. cervicornis J.Agardh NYYNN[9,12]These Hawaiian records are likely not H. cervicornis according to Nauer et al. [80].
H. chordacea Kützing NYYNN[9,12,24]
H. esperi Bory nom. illeg. NYNNN[22]The status of Hypnea species in Hawai‘i requires intensive molecular study.
H. musciformis (Wulfen) J.V.Lamouroux NYYNN[9,12,24]
H. pannosa J.Agardh NYYNN[12,22,24]
H. spinella (C.Agardh) Kützing NYYNN[12,22,24]
H. tsudae M.O.Paiano, F.P.Cabrera and A.R.SherwoodCalliblepharis saidana (Holmes) M.Y.Yang and M.S.Kim, H. saidana HolmesYYYYY[79]Described to accommodate a Bishop Museum specimen labeled “Calliblepharis saidana” but which was shown to be a Hypnea instead.
H. valentiae (Turner) Montagne NYYNN[12,22,24,32]
Hypneocolax BørgesenH. stellaris Børgesen NYYNN[9,12,24]
H. stellaris f. orientalis Weber BosseH. stellaris subsp. orientalis (Weber Bosse) WomersleyNYYNN[12,24]
DicranemataceaeTylotus J.AgardhT. laqueatus Kraft, K.Y.Conklin and A.R. Sherwood YYYYY[81]
DumontiaceaeDudresnaya P.Crouan and H.CrouanD. babbittiana Abbott and K.J.McDermid YYYYN[8,9,22,82,83]
D. hawaiiensis R.K.S.Lee NYYYN[8,9,12,22,84]
D. littleri I.A.AbbottD. lubrica LittlerYYYYN[9,12,83]
Gibsmithia DotyG. dotyi Kraft and R.W.Ricker NYYYN[9,12,22,24]
G. hawaiiensis Doty YYYYN[8,9,12,22,24,85]
G. punonomaewa A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[8]
EtheliaceaeEthelia Weber BosseE. hawaiiensis A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[86]
GigartinaceaeChondracanthus KützingC. acicularis (Roth) Fredericq NYYNN[12,24]
C. okamurae I.A.Abbott NYNNN[87]
C. tenellus (Harvey) Hommersand NYYNN[12,24]
Chondrus StackhouseC. ocellatus Holmes NYYNN[12,24]Kittle et al. (unpubl.) demonstrated that this represents an undescribed species of Chondrus, not C. ocellatus.
Mazzaella G.De ToniM. volans (C.Agardh) Fredericq NYYNN[12,24]
GloiosiphoniaceaePeleophycus I.A.AbbottP. multiprocarpius I.A.Abbott NYYYN[12,24]
KallymeniaceaeCroisettea M.J.WynneC. haukoaweo F.P.Cabrera and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[88]
C. kalaukapuae F.P.Cabrera and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[88]
C. ohelouliuli F.P.Cabrera and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[88]
C. pakualapa F.P.Cabrera and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[88]
Kallymenia J.AgardhK. sessilis Okamura NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
K. thompsonii I.A.Abbott and McDermid NYYNN[9,22,24,89]
Meredithia J.AgardhM. hawaiiensis F.P.Cabrera, Huisman and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[4]
Psaromenia D’Archino, W.A.Nelson and ZuccarelloP. laulamaula F.P.Cabrera, Huisman and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[4]
PhyllophoraceaeAhnfeltiopsis P.C.Silva and DeCewA. flabelliformis (Harvey) Masuda NYYNN[9,12,24]
A. pygmaea (J.Agardh) P.C.Silva and DeCew NYYNN[12,24]
Besa SetchellB. divaricata (Holmes) M.S.Calderon and S.M.BooAhnfeltiopsis divaricata (Holmes) MasudaNYYNN[12,24]
Gymnogongrus C.MartiusG. durvillei (Bory) M.S.Calderon and S.M.BooAhnfeltiopsis concinna (J.Agardh) P.C.Silva and DeCewNYYYN[9,12,22,24]
RhizophillidaceaePortieria ZanardiniP. hornemannii (Lyngbye) P.C.SilvaDesmia hornemannii LyngbyeNYYNN[9,12,22,24,90]Leliaert et al. [90] identified 92 candidate species within P. hornemannii worldwide, and Hawaiian specimens were in 2 of these; thus, these lineages may eventually be described as new species.
SolieriaceaeEucheuma J.AgardhE. denticulatum (N.L.Burman) Collins and Hervey NYYNN[9,12,24,91]Type locality unknown.
Kappaphycus DotyK. alvarezii (Doty) L.M.Liao NYYYN[9,12,24,91,92]
K. striatus (F.Schmitz) L.M.Liao NYYNN[9,12,24,91]
Wurdemannia HarveyW. miniata (Sprengel) Feldmann and Hamel NYNNN[12]
GracilarialesGracilariaceaeGracilaria GrevilleG. abbottiana M.D.Hoyle NYYYN[12,24]
G. bursa-pastoris (S.G.Gmelin) P.C.Silva NYNNN[13]
G. coronopifolia J.Agardh NYYYN[9,12,22,24,93]
G. dawsonii Hoyle YYYNN[9,12,24]
G. dotyi Hoyle YYYYN[12,24]
eG. epihippisora Hoyle YYYYN[12,24]
G. millardetii (Montagne) J.Agardh NYNNN[22]
G. parvispora I.A.Abbott NYYYN[9,12,24]
G. salicornia (C.Agardh) E.Y.Dawson NYYYN[9,12,24,93]
G. tikvahiae McLachlan NYYNN[12,24]
Gracilariopsis E.Y.DawsonG. lemaneiformis (Bory) E.Y.Dawson, Acleto and FoldvikGracilaria lemaneiformis (Bory) GrevilleNYYNN[12,24]
HalymenialesGrateloupiaceaeDermocorynus P.Crouan and H.CrouanD. occidentalis Hollenberg NYNNN[12]
Grateloupia C.AgardhG. clarionensis (Setchell and N.L.Gardner) S.Kawaguchi and H.W.WangPrionitis clarionensis (Setchell and N.L.Gardner) KajimuraNYNNN[94]
G. corymbifera (I.A.Abbott) S.Kawaguchi and H.W.WangPrionitis corymbifera I.A.AbbottYYNNN[12]
G. filicina (J.V.Lamouroux) C.Agardh NYYNN[9,12,24]
G. hawaiiana E.Y.Dawson YYYYN[9,12,24]
G. phuquocensis Tanaka and Pham-Hoàng Hô NYYNN[9,12,24]
HalymeniaceaeCarpopeltis F.SchmitzC. bushiae (Farlow) Kylin NYNNN[12]
Cryptonemia J.AgardhC. yendoi Weber Bosse NYYNN[9,12,24]
Halymenia C.AgardhH. actinophysa M.Howe NYNNN[12]
H. chiangiana I.A.Abbott and Kraft YYNNN[12]
H. cromwellii I.A.Abbott YYNNN[12]
H. formosa Harvey ex Kützing NYYNN[12,24]
H. hawaiiana Hernández-Kantún and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[95]
H. stipitata I.A.Abbott NYYYN[9,12,24,95]
Polyopes J.AgardhP. hakalauensis (Tilden) I.A.Abbott YYYYN[12,24,87,96]
HildenbrandialesHildenbrandiaceaeHildenbrandia NardoH. rubra (Sommerfelt) Meneghini NYYNN[24]
NemalialesGalaxauraceaeActinotrichia DecaisneA. fragilis (Forsskål) Børgesen NYYNN[9,12,24]
Dichotomaria LamarckD. apiculata (Kjellman) A.Kurihara and MasudaGalaxaura acuminata Kjellman ex Butters, G. apiculata KjellmanNYNNN[13]
D. marginata (J.Ellis and Solander) LamarckGalaxaura marginata (Ellis and Solander) J.V.LamourouxNYYNN[9,12,24,97]
D. obtusata (J.Ellis and Solander) LamarckGalaxaura obtusata (J.Ellis and Solander) J.V.LamourouxNYNNN[9,12]
Galaxaura J.V.LamourouxG. divaricata (Linnaeus) Huisman and R.A.TownsendG. fasciculata KjellmanNYYNN[12,24]
G. filamentosa R.C.Y.Chou NYYNN[12,24]
G. rugosa (J.Ellis and Solander) J.V.LamourouxG. subverticillata KjellmanNYYNN[9,12,22,97]
Tricleocarpa Huisman and BorowitzskaT. cylindrica (J.Ellis and Solander) Huisman and Borowitzka NYYNN[9,12,22,98]
T. fastigiata (Decaisne) Huisman, G.H.Boo and S.M.BooGalaxaura fastigiata DecaisneNYNNN[13]
T. fragilis (Linnaeus) Huisman and R.A.TownsendT. oblongata (Ellis and Solander) Huisman and BorowitzkaNYNNN[9,12,22]
LiagoraceaeAkalaphycus Huisman, I.A.Abbott and A.R.SherwoodA. liagoroides (Yamada) Huisman, I.A.Abbott and A.R.SherwoodStenopeltis liagoroides (Yamada) Itono and YoshizakiNYYNN[12,24,99]
A. setchelliae (Yamada) Huisman, I.A.Abbott and A.R.SherwoodStenopeltis setchelliae (Yamada) Itono and YoshizakiNYYNN[12,24,99]
Dermonema Harvey ex HeydrichD. pulvinatum (Grunow) Fan NYYNN[12,24]
Dotyophycus I.A.AbbottD. pacificus I.A.Abbott NYNNN[12]
D. yamadae (Ohmi and Itono) Abbott and Yoshizaki NYYNN[12,24]
Ganonema K.-C.Fan and Y.-C.WangG. farinosum (J.V.Lamouroux) K.-C.Fan and Y.-C.Wang NYYNN[9,12,22,100]
G. papenfussii (I.A.Abbott) Huisman, I.A.Abbott and A.R.SherwoodLiagora papenfussii I.A.AbbottNYYYN[9,12,22,24,100]
G. pinnatum (Harvey) HuismanLiagora pinnata HarveyNYYNN[9,12,22,24,100]
G. yoshizakii Huisman, I.A.Abbott, and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[24,100]
Gloiotrichus Huisman and KraftG. fractalis Huisman and Kraft NYNNN[101]
Helminthocladia J.AgardhH. rhizoidea Doty and I.A.Abbott YYYNN[12,24,102]
H. simplex Doty and Abbott YYNNN[12,102]
Hommersandiophycus S.-M.Lin and HuismanH. samaensis (C.K.Tseng) S.-M.Lin and HuismanGanonema samaense (C.K.Tseng) Huisman, Liagora samaensis C.K.TsengNYYNN[9,12,24,100]
Izziella DotyI. orientalis (J.Agardh) Huisman and SchilsLiagora orientalis J.AgardhNYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Liagora J.V.LamourouxL. albicans J.V.LamourouxL. maxima ButtersNYYNN[[9,12,22,24,99]
L. boergesenii Yamada NYYNN[12,24]
L. ceranoides J.V.Lamouroux NYYNN[9,12,22,32]
L. donaldiana I.A.Abbott and Huisman YYYYN[9,32,100,103]
L. hawaiiana Butters NYNNN[12,22]
L. julieae Abbott and Huisman YYYYN[9,24,32,100,103]
L. robusta Yamada NYYNN[22,24]
L. tetrasporifera Børgesen NYNNN[13]Doubtful record.
L. turneri Zanardini NYNNN[22]
Macrocarpus S.-M.Lin, S.-Y.Yang and HuismanM. perennis (I.A.Abbott) S.-M.Lin, S.-Y.Yang and HuismanLiagora perennis I.A.AbbottNYYYN[9,12,24,32,99]
Neoizziella Lin, S.-M., Yang, S.-Y. and HuismanN. divaricata (C.K.Tseng) S.-M.Lin, S.-Y.Yang and HuismanLiagora divaricata C.K.TsengNYYNN[9,12,24,32,100]
Stenopeltis Itono and YoshizakiS. gracilis (Yamada and Tanaka) Itono and Yoshizaki NYYNN[9,12,24,32,99]
Titanophycus Huisman, G.W.Saunders and A.R.SherwoodT. setchellii (Yamada) S.-M.Lin, S.-Y.Yang and HuismanLiagora setchellii YamadaNYNNN[12,22]
T. validus (Harvey) Huisman, G.W.Saunders and A.R.SherwoodLiagora valida HarveyNYYNN[9,12,24,32,100,104]
Trichogloea KützingT. lubrica J.Agardh NYYNN[9,12,24,32,99]
T. requienii (Montagne) Kützing NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Trichogloeopsis I.A.Abbott and DotyT. hawaiiana I.A.Abbott and Doty NYNNN[9,12,22]
T. mucosissima (Yamada) I.A.Abbott and Doty NYNNN[12]
ScinaiaceaeScinaia Bivona-BernardiS. furcata Zablackis YYYYN{9,12,24}
S. hormoides Setchell NYYYN[9,12,24]
S. huismanii Vroom and I.A.Abbott YYNNN[9,22,105]
YamadaellaceaeYamadaella I.A.AbbottY. caenomyce (Decaisne) I.A.Abbott NYYNN[9,12,24,32,100]
NemastomatalesNemastomataceaePredaea G.De ToniP. laciniosa Kraft NYYNN[9,12,15,22,24,106]
P. weldii Kraft and I.A.Abbott NYYYN[9,12,22,24,106]
SchizymeniaceaePlatoma Schousboe ex F.SchmitzP. ardreanum Kraft and I.A.Abbott NYYYN[9,12,24]
Titanophora (J.Agardh) FeldmannT. pikeana (Dickie) Feldmann NYYNN[9,12,24]
PeyssonnelialesPeyssonneliaceaeAgissea Pestana, Lyra, Cassano and J.M.C.NunesA. inamoena (Pilger) Pestana, Lyra, Cassano and J.M.C. NunesPeyssonnelia inamoena PilgerNYYNN[12,22,24]
A. orientalis (Weber Bosse) Pestana, Lyra, Cassano and J.M.C.NunesPeyssonnelia orientalis Weber BosseNYYNN[107]
Incendia K.R.DixonI. lisianskiensis A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[107]
Peyssonnelia DecaisneP. conchicola Piccone and Grunow NYYNN[12,24]
P. rubra (Greville) J.Agardh NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Ramicrusta Zhang Derui and Zhou JinghuaR. hawaiiensis A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[108,109]
R. lehuensis A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[108]
Seiria K.R.DixonS. mesophotica A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[107]
Sonderophycus DenizotS. copusii A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[7]
PihiellalesPihiellaceaePihiella Huisman, Sherwood and I.A.AbbottP. liagoraciphila Huisman, A.R.Sherwood and I.A.Abbott NYYYY[9,17]
PlocamialesPlocamiaceaePlocamium J.V.LamourouxP. sandvicense J.Agardh NYYYN[9,12,22,24,32]
RhodachlyalesRhodachlyaceaeRhodachlya J.A.West, J.L.Scott, K.A.West, U.Karsten, S.L.Clayden and G.W.SaundersR. hawaiiana A.Kurihara, J.A.West, K.Y.Conklin and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[110]
Rhodophyta ordo incertae sedisPterocladiophilaceaeGelidiocolax N.L.GardnerG. mammillatus K.-C.Fan and Papenfuss NYNNN[12,111]
RhodymenialesChampiaceaeChampia DesvauxC. parvula (C.Agardh) Harvey NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
C. vieillardii Kützing NYYNN[9,12,24]
Coelothrix BørgesenC. irregularis (Harvey) Børgesen NYYNN[9,12,24]
FaucheaceaeGloioderma J.AgardhG. iyoense OkamuraGloiocladia iyoensis (Okamura) R.E.NorrisNYYNN[12,22,24]The taxonomic status of Gloiocladia, Gloioderma, and Fauchea is currently unclear and requires intensive study.
Leptofauchea KylinL. huawelau E.A.Alvarado, F.P.Cabrera and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[112]
L. lucida Huisman and G.W.Saunders NYYYY[112]
LomentariaceaeCeratodictyon ZanardiniC. intricatum (C.Agardh) R.E.NorrisGelidiopsis intricata (C.Agardh) VickersNYNNN[12,22]
C. scoparium (Montagne and Millardet) R.E.NorrisGelidiopsis scoparia (Montagne and Millardet) De ToniNYYNN[9,12,24]
C. variabile (J.Agardh) R.E.NorrisGelidiopsis variabilis (Greville ex J.Agardh) F.SchmitzNYNNN[12,22]
Yendoa (Yendo) C.C.Santos, Lyra and J.M.C.NunesYendoa hakodatensis (Yendo) C.C.Santos, Lyra and J.M.C.NunesLomentaria hakodatensis YendoNYYNN[12,22,24]
RhodymeniaceaeBotryocladia (J.Agardh) PfeifferB. skottsbergii (Børgesen) Levring NYYNN[9,12,22,24]
B. tenuissima W.R.Taylor NYNNN[9,12,22]
Chamaebotrys HuismanC. boergesenii (Weber Bosse) Huisman NYYNN[12,22,24]
Chrysymenia J.AgardhC. glebosa I.A.Abbott and Littler NYNNN[12,22]
C. kaernbachii Grunow NYYNN[12,24]
C. okamurae Yamada and Segawa NYYNN[12,22,24]
C. procumbens Weber Bosse NYNNN[12]
Coelarthrum BørgesenC. cliftonii (Harvey) Kylin NYYNN[12,22,24]
Drouetia G.De ToniD. coalescens (Farlow) G.De ToniHalichrysis coalescens (Farlow) R.E.Norris and A.J.K.MillarNYYNN[9,12,22,24]
Erythrocolon J.AgardhE. podagricum J.Agardh NYYNN[12,24]
Halichrysis (J.Agardh) F.SchmitzH. irregularis (Kützing) A.J.K.Millar NYNNN[22,44]
Halopeltis J.AgardhH. nuahilihilia E.A.Alvarado, F.P.Cabrera and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[112]
Rhodymenia GrevilleR. leptophylla J.AgardhR. leptophylloides E.Y.DawsonNYNNN[9,12,24]
SebdenialesSebdeniaceaeLesleigha Kraft and G.W.SaundersL. hawaiiensis Kraft and G.W.Saunders NYYYY[113]
SporolithalesSporolithaceaeSporolithon HeydrichS. episoredion (W.H.Adey, R.A.Townsend and Boykins) Verheij NYNNN[9]
S. erythraeum (Rothpletz) Kylin NYNNN[9]
Sporolithon sp.S. ptychoides HeydrichNYYNN[114]According to Richards et al. [115], Hawaiian records of S. ptychoides Heydrich do not represent this taxon.
StylonematalesStylonemataceaeChroodactylon HansgirgC. ornatum (C.Agardh) BassonAsterocytis ramosa (Thwaites) Gobi ex F.SchmitzNYYNN[9,12,24]
Stylonema ReinschS. alsidii (Zanardini) K.M.DrewGoniotrichum alsidii (Zanardini) M.HoweNYYNN[12,24]
S. cornu-cervi Reinsch NYNNN[12,22]
ChlorophytaBryopsidalesBryopsidaceaeBryopsis J.V.LamourouxB. hypnoides J.V.Lamouroux NYNNN[9,14,22]
B. indica A.Gepp and E.Gepp NYNNN[22]
B. pennata var. pennata NYNNN[9,14,22]
B. pennata var. secunda (Harvey) Collins and Hervey NYNNN[9,14]
CaulerpaceaeCaulerpa J.V.LamourouxC. ambigua OkamuraCaulerpella ambigua (Okamura) Prud’homme and LokhorstNYYNN[14,22,116]
C. andamanensis (W.R.Taylor) Draisma, Prudhomme and SauvageCaulerpa filicoides var. andamanensis W.R.TaylorNYYNN[117]
C. antoensis Yamada NYYNN[14,22,118]
C. chemnitzia (Esper) J.V.LamourouxCaulerpa peltata J.V.LamourouxNYYUN[22,119]
C. cupressoides (Vahl) C.Agardh NYYNN[14,22,118]
C. elongata Weber Bosse NYNNN[22,119]
C. elongata f. disticha W.R.Taylor NYNNN[14]
C. filicoides Yamada NYNNN[120]
C. lentillifera J.Agardh NYNNN[14]
C. mexicana Sonder ex Kützing NYYNN[118,120]
C. microphysa (Weber Bosse) FeldmannC. racemosa f. microphysa Weber BosseNYNNN[14,22]
C. nummularia Harvey ex J.Agardh NYNNN[9,14]
C. racemosa (Forsskål) J.Agardh NYYNN[9,14,22,118]
C. racemosa var. macrophysa (Sonder ex Kützing) W.R.TaylorC. macrophysa (Sonder ex Kützing) G.MurrayNYYNN[9,14,118]
C. serrulata (Forsskål) J.Agardh NYYNN[9,14,22,118]
C. sertularioides (S.G.Gmelin) M.Howe NYYNN[9,14,22,118]
C. taxifolia (M.Vahl) C.Agardh NYYNN[9,14,22,118]
C. verticillata J.Agardh NYYNN[14]
C. webbiana Montagne NYYNN[9,14,22,116,118]
Caulerpa J.V.LamourouxC. webbiana f. disticha Vickers NYYNN[118]
Caulerpa J.V.LamourouxC. webbiana f. tomentella (Harvey ex J.Agardh) Weber Bosse NYNNN[119]
CodiaceaeCodium StackhouseC. arabicum Kützing NYYNN[9,14,22,116]
C. campanulatum P.C.Silva and M.E.Chacana NYNNN[14]
C. decorticatum (Woodward) M.Howe NYNNN[14,22]
C. desultorium P.C.Silva and M.E.Chacana YYNNN[14]
C. edule P.C.Silva NYYYN[9,14,22,32,116]
C. hawaiiense P.C.Silva and M.E.Chacana YYYNN[14,116]
C. intermedium P.C.Silva and M.E.Chacana YYNNN[14]
C. mamillosum Harvey NYNNN[14,22]
C. phasmaticum Setchell YYNNN[14]
C. picturatum F.F.Pedroche and P.C.Silva NYNNN[14]
C. pomoides J.Agardh NYNNN[14]
C. reediae P.C.Silva NYNNN[9,14,22]
C. saccatum Okamura NYNNN[14,22]
C. spongiosum Harvey NYNNN[14,22]
C. subtubulosum Okamura NYNNN[14,22]
DerbesiaceaeDerbesia SolierD. fastigiata W.R.Taylor NYNNN[9,14,22]
D. tenuissima (Moris and De Notaris) P.Crouan and H.Crouan NYNNN[9,14]
DichotomosiphonaceaeAvrainvillea DecaisneA. lacerata J.AgardhA. amadelpha (Montagne) A.Gepp and E.S.GeppNYYYY[9,14,121,122]Wade [122] corrected the identification to A. lacerata.
HalimedaceaeBoodleopsis A.Gepp and E.S.GeppB. hawaiiensis Gilbert YYNNN[14]
Chlorodesmis Harvey and BaileyC. caespitosa J.AgardhRhipidodesmis caespitosa (J.Agardh) A.Gepp and E.GeppNYYNN[9,14,22,116]
C. hildebrandtii A.Gepp and E.S.Gepp NYNNN[13]
Halimeda J.V.LamourouxH. copiosa Goreau and E.A.Graham NYNNN[14]
H. discoidea Decaisne NYYUN[9,14,22,123,124]
H. distorta (Yamada) Hillis-Colinvaux NYYNN[22], GenBank accession AF525647
H. fragilis W.R.Taylor NYNNN[47]
H. gracilis Harvey ex J.Agardh NYYYN[14,22,124]
H. incrassata (J.Ellis) J.V.Lamouroux NYYYN[14,125]
H. kanaloana Vroom NYYYY[9,125]
H. macroloba Decaisne NYNNN[14,22]
H. opuntia (Linnaeus) J.V.Lamouroux NYYNN[9,14,22]
H. tuna (J.Ellis and Solander) J.V.Lamouroux NYYNN[14]
H. velasquezii W.R.Taylor NYNNN[14,22]
Rhipidosiphon MontagneR. javensis Montagne NYNNN[9,14,22]
Siphonogramen I.A.Abbott and HuismanS. abbreviatum (W.J.Gilbert) I.A.Abbott and HuismanUdotea abbreviata GilbertNYYYN[14,124]
S. parvum (W.J.Gilbert) I.A.Abbott and HuismanPseudochlorodesmis parva W.J.GilbertNYNNN[14,126]
Udotea J.V.LamourouxU. geppiorum Yamada NYYNN[127]
OstreobiaceaeOstreobium Bornet and FlahaultO. quekettii Bornet and Flahault NYNNN[73]
PseudobryopsidaceaePseudobryopsis BertholdP. oahuensis Egerod NYYYN[9,14,22,128]
ChaetophoralesUronemataceaeUronema LagerheimU. marinum Womersley NYNNN[14,22]
CladophoralesAnadyomenaceaeAnadyomene J.V.LamourouxA. cladophoroides (W.J.Gilbert) M.D.Guiry and A.R.Sherwood comb. nov. 4 Y?YNNN[129]AlgaeBase lists this as a provisional record in need of confirmation.
A. wrightii Harvey ex J.E.Gray NYNNN[14]
Microdictyon DecaisneM. japonicum Setchell NYNNN[13]
M. setchellianum M.Howe NYNNN[9,14,22]
M. umbilicatum (Velley) Zanardini NYYNN[9,14,22,130]
BoodleaceaeBoodlea G.Murray and De ToniB. composita (Harvey) F.Brand NYYNN[9,14,22]
B. montagnei (Harvey ex J.E.Gray) Egerod NYYNN[9,14,22]
B. vanbosseae Reinbold NYNNN[22]
Cladophoropsis BørgesenC. fasciculata (Kjellman) WilleC. sundanensis ReinboldNYNNN[14]
C. membranacea (Hofman-Bang ex C.Agardh) Børgesen NYNNN[14]
Phyllodictyon J.E.GrayP. anastomosans (Harvey) Kraft and M.J.Wynne NYNNN[9,14,22]
CladophoraceaeChaetomorpha KützingC. aerea (Dillwyn) Kützing NYNNN[14]
C. antennina (Bory) Kützing NYNNN[9,14,22]
C. basiretrorsa Setchell NYNNN[9]
C. brachygona Harvey NYNNN[14]Doubtful record.
C. indica (Kützing) Kützing NYNNN[9,14]
C. ligustica (Kützing) KützingC. capillaris (Kützing) BørgesenNYNNN[9,14]
Cladophora KützingC. albida (Nees) Kützing NYNNN[120]
C. fuiliginosa KützingC. catenata KützingNYYNN[9,130]According to AlgaeBase “The records of Cladophora catenata outside the Mediterranean most likely refer to Cladophora fuiliginosa Kützing.” See for sequence data: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17574874/ accessed on 3 January 2023
C. flexuosa (O.F.Müller) Kützing NYNNN[14,22]
C. fuliginosa KützingC. luxurians (Gilbert) Abbott and HuismanNYNNN[14]
C. hawaiiana Tilden NYNNN[14,22]
C. laetevirens (Dillwyn) Kützing NYNNN[14,22]
C. sericea (Hudson) Kützing NYNNN[9,14,22]
C. socialis KützingC. patentiramea (Montagne) KützingNYNNN[14,22]
C. vagabunda (Linnaeus) HoekC. fascicularis (Mertens ex C.Agardh) KützingNYNNN[9,14,22]
Lychaete J.AgardhL. sakaii (I.A.Abbott) M.J.Wynne NYNNN[120]
L. dotyana (W.J.Gilbert) M.J.WynneAcrocladus dotyanus (W.J.Gilbert) Boedeker, Cladophora dotyana W.J.Gilbert, Cladophora patula SakaiNYNNN[13,14,22,47]
L. herpestica (Montagne) M.J.WynneCladophoropsis adhaerens Gilbert, Cladophoropsis hespestica (Montagne) M.HoweNYNNN[131,132]
L. japonica (Yamada) M.J.WynneCladophora japonica YamadaNYNNN[14,22]
Pseudorhizoclonium BoedekerP. africanum (Kützing) BoedekerRhizoclonium africanum KützingNYNNN[14]
Rhizoclonium KützingR. grande Børgesen NYNNN[14]
R. riparium (Roth) HarveyR. implexum (Dillwyn) KützingNYNNN[14]
SiphonocladaceaeDictyosphaeria DecaisneD. cavernosa (Forsskål) Børgesen NYNNN[9,14,22]
D. versluysii Weber Bosse NYNNN[9,14,22]
Siphonocladus F.SchmitzS. tropicus (P.Crouan and H.Crouan) J.Agardh NYYNN[9,14,22], NCBI BioProject PRJEB49977
ValoniaceaeValonia C.AgardhV. aegagropila C.Agardh NYYNN[9,14,22,130]
V. trabeculata Egerod YYNNN[9,14]
V. ventricosa J.AgardhVentricaria ventricosa (J.Agardh) J.L.Olsen and J.A.WestNYNNN[9,14,22]
Valoniopsis BørgesenV. pachynema (G.Martens) Børgesen NYNNN[14]
DasycladalesDasycladaceaeBornetella Munier-ChalmasB. sphaerica (Zanardini) Solms-Laubach NYNNN[9,14,22]
Neomeris J.V.LamourouxN. annulata Dickie NYNNN[9,14,22]
N. vanbosseae M.Howe NYNNN[9,14,22]
PolyphysaceaeParvocaulis S.Berger, U.Fettweiss, S.Gleissberg, L.B.Liddle, U.Richter, H.Sawitzky and G.C.ZuccarelloP. clavatus (Yamada) S.Berger, U.Fettweiss, S.Gleissberg, L.B.Liddle, U.Richter, H.Sawitzky and G.C.ZuccarelloAcetabularia clavata YamadaNYNNN[9,14,22]
P. exiguus (Solms-Laubach) S.Berger, Fettweiss, Gleissberg, Liddle, U.Richter, Sawitzky and ZuccarelloAcetabularia exigua Solms-LaubachNYNNN[9,14]
P. parvulus (Solms-Laubach) S.Berger, Fettweiss, Gleissberg, Liddle, U.Richter, Sawitzky and ZuccarelloAcetabularia parvula Solms-LaubachNYYNN[9,14,22,128]
UlotrichalesGayraliaceaeGayralia K.L.VinogradovaG. oxysperma (Kützing) K.L.Vinogradova ex Scagel and al. NYNNN[9,14,22]
UlotrichaceaeUlothrix KützingU. subflaccida Wille NYNNN[22]
UlvalesKornmanniaceaeNeostromatella M.J.Wynne, G.Furnari and R.NielsenN. monostromatica M.J.Wynne, G.Furnari and R.NielsenStromatella monostromatica (P.J.L.Dangeard) Kornmann and SahlingNYNNN[14]
PhaeophilaceaePhaeophila HauckP. dendroides (P.Crouan and H.Crouan) Batters NYNNN[73]
UlvaceaeRyuguphycus H.Kawai, T.Hanyuda and T.KitayamaR. kuaweuweu (H.L.Spalding and A.R.Sherwood) H.Kawai, T.Hanyuda and T.KitayamaUmbraulva kuaweuweu H.L.Spalding and A.R.SherwoodNYYYY[3]
Ulva LinnaeusU. clathrata (Roth) C.AgardhEnteromorpha clathrata (Roth) GrevilleNYNNN[14,22,133]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. compressa LinnaeusEnteromorpha compressa (Linnaeus) NeesNYNNN[14,22,133]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
Ulva expansa (Setchell) Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. flexuosa WulfenEnteromorpha flexuosa (Wulfen) J.AgardhNYNNN[9,14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. iliohaha H.L.Spalding and A.R.Sherwood NYYYY[3]
U. intestinalis LinnaeusEnteromorpha intestinalis (Linnaeus) NeesNYNNN[14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. lactuca LinnaeusU. fasciata DelileNYYNN[9,14,22,133]
Ulva linza LinnaeusEnteromorpha linza (Linnaeus) J.AgardhNYNNN[14]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. ohiohilulu H.L.Spalding and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[3]
U. ohnoi M.Hiraoka and S.Shimada NYYYN[133]
U. paradoxa C.AgardhEnteromorpha paradoxa (C.Agardh) Kützing, Ulva flexuosa subsp. paradoxa (C.Agardh) M.J.WynneNYNNN[14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is unconfirmed in Hawai‘i.
U. prolifera O.F.MüllerEnteromorpha prolifera (O.F.Müller) J.AgardhNYNNN[14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. reticulata Forsskål NYNNN[9,14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. rigida C.Agardh NYNNN[14,22]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
U. taeniata (Setchell) Setchell and N.L.Gardner NYNNN[14]According to O’Kelly et al. [133], this species is likely not found in Hawai‘i.
Umbraulva E.H.Bae and I.K.LeeU. kaloakulau H.L.Spalding and A.R.Sherwood YYYYY[3]
UlvellaceaeUlvella P.Crouan and H.CrouanU. lens P.Crouan and H.Crouan NYNNN[14,22]
U. scutata (Reinke) R.Nielsen, C.J.O’Kelly and B.Wysor NYNNN[22]
U. setchellii P.J.L.Dangeard NYNNN[14]
U. viridis (Reinke) R.Nielsen, C.J.O’Kelly and B.WysorEntocladia viridis ReinkeNYNNN[14,22]
Ulvophyceae incertae sedisUlvophyceae familia incertae sedisBlastophysa ReinkeB. rhizopus Reinke NYNNN[9,14]
PrasinodermatophytaPalmophyllalesPalmophyllaceaePalmophyllum KützingP. crassum (Naccari) Rabenhorst NYNNN[9,14,22]
TracheophytaAlismatalesHydrocharitaceaeHalophila ThouarsH. decipiens Ostenfeld NYNNN[9]
H. hawaiiana Doty and B.C.Stone YYYNN[9,134]
RuppiaceaeRuppia LinnaeusR. maritima Linnaeus NYYNN[9,135]
1 Includes instances where a different name is or has been used to refer to the taxon in the Hawaiian Islands, and includes taxonomic synonyms as well as common and widespread misidentifications. 2 Yes = Y, No = No, Unknown = U. 3 Numbers refer to citations in the references section of this manuscript. 4 Rhipidiphyllon cladophoroides W.J.Gilbert is currently placed in a genus the type of which has been transferred to Anadyoneme. Thus, a new combination is necessary, as follows: Anadyoneme cladophoroides (W.J.Gilbert) comb. nov. Basionym: Rhipidiphyllon cladophoroides W.J.Gilbert, Phycologia 7: 54, figs 1, 3–8, 1969.
Due to seasonality of reproduction, or simply the infrequent nature of these events, many marine algae have heteromorphic life histories, with morphologically distinct gametophytic and sporophytic phases, and the full suite of relevant morphological characters may not be available in the specimens at hand for identification. Moreover, in recent years there have been many demonstrated instances of cryptic and pseudocryptic speciation, e.g., [136,137], as well as suspected incipient speciation—e.g., [52,138], which can provide other scenarios where reliance on morphological features can yield misidentification. Given these pitfalls of employing a strictly morphological approach to identification, greater emphasis has been placed on incorporating molecular comparisons into taxonomic identifications over the past several decades (e.g., as exemplified by recent systematic work on the brown algal genus Lobophora; [139,140,141]), and this is reflected in the degree of confidence in taxonomic identification that can be discerned in the current list.
The Hawaiian marine algal flora is presently comprised of 661 subgeneric taxa (652 species), which compares to the approximately 515 taxa reported for the red, green, and brown Hawaiian marine algal flora by Abbott [12] and Abbott and Huisman [14] during the most recent comprehensive compilations. Relative to other regions, the Hawaiian flora is moderately rich: it compares to the 442 species recorded from Madagascar [23], 425 from French Polynesia [142], 522 from north-western Australia [143,144], 900 from New Zealand [145], and 850 from South Africa [146]. Endemism in the Hawaiian flora is relatively low (13.1%) when compared to other organismal groups, for example: Hawaiian flowering plants (90%) and ferns (about 70% [147]). Vieira et al. [23] reported that the Malagasy seaweeds are 6.5% endemic based on their analyses to date; this is much lower compared to the reported endemism rates for Malagasy terrestrial flora and fauna (37–100%). They also noted that more comprehensive molecular surveys and cross-referencing of records are needed to clarify these figures. Indeed, the Hawaiian inventory includes several records that may be excluded or modified in the future as molecular frameworks (bolstered by intensive systematic study of smaller groups of taxa) clarify the names included here (e.g., for many of the Corallinales).
The Hawaiian archipelago is well known as a center of high endemism and biological uniqueness [2], and an urgent need exists to document the biodiversity of this unique island chain in the face of threats from habitat loss, on-going alien species introductions, invasive species and land-derived pollutants [148], changing coastlines with shoreline development, bloom-forming algae encroaching on shoreline habitat, climate change, corresponding sea-level rise and loss of coral reefs due to depth, and temperature and salinity changes [148,149]. Documentation of the baseline diversity of Hawai‘i’s marine algae and seagrasses is necessary to monitor and assess new arrivals to the State. The Hawaiian Islands are an extremely isolated island chain, clearly the most isolated on the planet, and the relatively dense human population relies heavily on imported material goods, which primarily arrive via shipping. Although research in this area has not been exhaustive, the results from a single survey of hull-fouled ships raise cause for concern. Godwin [150] surveyed eight maritime vessels on the island of O‘ahu for hull-fouling organisms and reported 14 species of red algae, nine green algae and three brown algae (a total of 26 species), of which only nine (35%) were native to the Hawaiian Islands. If these results are extrapolated to the number of vessels traveling to the Hawaiian Islands, then the potential for new algal introductions is truly staggering. At present, new records are often reported without knowledge of the vector of introduction (e.g., Ulva ohnoi, a “green tide” species, was reported from the coastlines of Hawai‘i for the first time in 2010 [133]), but building knowledge of the current macroalgal diversity, especially within a molecular context, will allow future introductions to be assessed more easily and accurately.

5. Conclusions

This compilation of 661 Hawaiian marine algae and seagrasses provides a point-in-time summary that includes a 27% increase over the last compilations from approximately 20 years ago. The fields of taxonomy and systematics have revolutionized during that interval due to the near-ubiquitous incorporation of molecular analyses, which have supported numerous new descriptions at almost all taxonomic levels, confirmation of previous morphology-based identifications, and new taxonomic combinations. With the inclusion of information about “degree of confidence” in identification derived from the use of molecular data and type specimen comparisons, we aim to bring a new level of utility to the taxonomic inventory and enable future researchers to have a solid understanding of the basis for application of each taxonomic name to the Hawaiian flora. In the face of numerous threats to biodiversity in the coming decades, it is hoped that critical inventories, such as these, will provide baseline data sets against which future changes may be compared.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.R.S. and M.D.G.; methodology, A.R.S.; validation, A.R.S. and M.D.G.; formal analysis, A.R.S.; resources, A.R.S. and M.D.G.; writing—original draft preparation, A.R.S.; writing—review and editing, A.R.S. and M.D.G.; funding acquisition, A.R.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the US National Science Foundation, grant number DEB-1754117.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

We much appreciate the comments of John Huisman and two additional anonymous reviewers.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

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Figure 1. Map of the Hawaiian Archipelago (courtesy of NOAA-PMNM). The map includes the Main Hawaiian Islands (shown in green) as well as the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (with the extent of the Monument indicated with a white outline). Marine algal records from both regions are included in the inventory.
Figure 1. Map of the Hawaiian Archipelago (courtesy of NOAA-PMNM). The map includes the Main Hawaiian Islands (shown in green) as well as the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (with the extent of the Monument indicated with a white outline). Marine algal records from both regions are included in the inventory.
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Figure 2. Select species of Hawaiian marine macroalgae, including some recently discovered and/or described taxa. (a). Avrainvillea erecta, a green alga recently reported as a new introduction to Hawaiian waters. (b). Chondria tumulosa, a recently described red alga that forms nuisance blooms in PMNM. (c). Ulva ohiohilulu, a mesophotic green alga described from Hawai‘i (d). Sonderophycus copusii, a peyssonnelioid red alga known only from mesophotic depths in PMNM. (e). Haraldiophyllum hawaiiense, a red alga described in 2020 from 81 to 93 m depth in PMNM (f). Martensia lauhiekoeloa, a red alga described in 2019 from 61 to 67 m depth in PMNM (g). Psaromenia laulamaula, a red alga from 83 to 94 m in PMNM (h). Codium fragile, a widespread green alga known also from Hawai‘i. Scale bar = 1 cm (all but (c)); 5 cm (c).
Figure 2. Select species of Hawaiian marine macroalgae, including some recently discovered and/or described taxa. (a). Avrainvillea erecta, a green alga recently reported as a new introduction to Hawaiian waters. (b). Chondria tumulosa, a recently described red alga that forms nuisance blooms in PMNM. (c). Ulva ohiohilulu, a mesophotic green alga described from Hawai‘i (d). Sonderophycus copusii, a peyssonnelioid red alga known only from mesophotic depths in PMNM. (e). Haraldiophyllum hawaiiense, a red alga described in 2020 from 81 to 93 m depth in PMNM (f). Martensia lauhiekoeloa, a red alga described in 2019 from 61 to 67 m depth in PMNM (g). Psaromenia laulamaula, a red alga from 83 to 94 m in PMNM (h). Codium fragile, a widespread green alga known also from Hawai‘i. Scale bar = 1 cm (all but (c)); 5 cm (c).
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Sherwood, A.R.; Guiry, M.D. Inventory of the Seaweeds and Seagrasses of the Hawaiian Islands. Biology 2023, 12, 215. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12020215

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Sherwood AR, Guiry MD. Inventory of the Seaweeds and Seagrasses of the Hawaiian Islands. Biology. 2023; 12(2):215. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12020215

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Sherwood, Alison R., and Michael D. Guiry. 2023. "Inventory of the Seaweeds and Seagrasses of the Hawaiian Islands" Biology 12, no. 2: 215. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12020215

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