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First Compendium on Deep-water Algae of Puerto Rico Published

A new taxonomic publication describes the relatively unknown algal flora of mesophotic coral ecosystems in Puerto Rico. These ecosystems are characterized by the presence of light-dependent corals and associated communities found at depths ranging from 100 to 500 feet deep. The work, published in a recent issue of Smithsonian Contributions to Botany, was supported partly by the NCCOS deep coral reef ecosystem studies project in the Caribbean.

The report's front cover images from left to right: Mesophotic Reef on the edge of insular shelf, offshore from La Parguera, Puerto Rico; technical divers' studying mesophotic reefs; an example of bottom habitat offshore of La Parguera. Credit: Smithsonian Institution and the University of Puerto Rico.
The report’s front cover images from left to right: mesophotic reef on the edge of insular shelf, offshore from La Parguera, Puerto Rico; technical divers studying mesophotic reefs; and an example of bottom habitat offshore from La Parguera, Puerto Rico. Credit: Smithsonian Institution and the University of Puerto Rico.

The report summarizes over 30 years of algal collections using deep-water open-circuit and closed-circuit scuba diving, dredges, and submersibles in Puerto Rico. In total, 185 algal taxa are reported at depths greater than 115 feet. These mesophotic flora consist of 60 percent red algae (Rhodophyta), 11 percent brown algae (Phaeophyceae), and 29 percent green algae (Chlorophyta).Mesophotic algae represent one-third of the known marine algae in Puerto Rico.

Citation: Ballantine, D.L., H. Ruiz Torres, and N.E. Aponte. 2016. The Mesophotic, Coral Reef-Associated, Marine Algal Flora of Puerto Rico, Caribbean Sea. Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press: Washington, D.C. 41 pp.

For more information, contact Kimberly.Puglise@noaa.gov.