Gracilaria parvispora
Gracilaria parvispora, known by the common names ogo, long ogo, red ogo, and limu ogo, is a large species of marine red alga in the genus Gracilaria. Endemic to Hawaii, it is highly sought after as an edible seaweed and is popular in mariculture and the marine aquarium trade.
Description
Gracilaria parvispora is composed of pointed, cylindrical branches, in diameter, extending from a central axis, in diameter, with a single holdfast. Individuals reach lengths upwards of. As with other species of Gracilaria, G. parvispora can be highly variable based on environmental conditions. Though generally red in coloration, it may also be yellow, brown, green, white, and black depending on sunlight, water flow, and depth. The branching of the central axis is also variable, with individuals generally, though not always, displaying three orders of branching and lower water flow and salinity bringing out denser branch growth.Large, thick-walled medullary cells grade down to in diameter, giving way to a subcortex 1–2 cells thick and a 1-layered cortex in this species. Tetrasporangia, measuring, are scattered and often pear-shaped. Spermatangia take the form of dimples with modified surrounding cells. Cystocarps are in diameter and are only partially filled by a small internal spore mass. Gonimoblast tissue is thin-walled. Tubular nutritive cells and lateral and vertical pit connections of the pericarp are conspicuous; the pericarp contents are star-shaped.
Distribution
Natural distribution
Gracilaria parvispora is endemic to Hawaii, with localized distribution around the islands of Oahu and Molokai. It can be found in Kāneʻohe Bay, Ke’ehi Lagoon, One’ula Beach, and ‘Ewa Beach and at Hau’ula, Coconut Island, and the Oceanic Institute of Hawaii Pacific University. Populations of G. parvispora in Molokai are the result of experimental outplantings of spore-bearing gravel, introduced between 1983 and 1985 east of Kaunakakai.It is hypothesized that G. parvispora is native to Asia and was later introduced to Hawaii for cultivation, although there is no conclusive evidence of this. Gracilaria parvispora may have also been a narrow endemic to the islands until its range was expanded by aquaculture. Occurrences of Gracilaria bursa-pastoris from Korea and Japan may actually represent a misidentification of G. parvispora.
Presence in Baja California Sur
Gracilaria parvispora is an introduced species in Baja California Sur and has been found in San Ignacio Lagoon, San Buto, San Juan de la Costa, and La Concha Beach. The alga's current distribution in the eastern Pacific Ocean and its impacts on native biodiversity remain relatively unknown.Ecology
Gracilaria parvispora inhabits reef flats and areas with sand-coated rocky substrate. It is tolerant of a wide range of environmental conditions, preferring nutrient rich water, moderate to high lighting and current, dKH between 8 and 12, pH between 8.1 and 8.4, water salinity between 1.010 and 1.025 SG, water temperature between, calcium between 390 and 440 ppm, magnesium between 1,200 and 1,400 ppm, phosphate between 0.01 and 0.1 ppm, and nitrate between 1 and 20 ppm.Under ideal conditions, the alga is a fast grower and rapidly absorbs micronutrients, capable of increasing its biomass by 150% or more in a single month. In fact, it is one of the fastest growing species of Gracilaria and is one of the larger species of red algae native to the Hawaiian Islands. Though once common in the region, the alga has become overharvested, with the invasive G. salicornia having largely replaced Gracilaria parvispora around the island of Oahu.
Conservation
Alongside Gracilaria coronopifolia and Asparagopsis taxiformis, G. parvispora is one of the three most highly sought-after edible seaweeds in the Hawaiian Islands; there may possibly be an export market for dried G. parvispora. In Hawaii, it has historically been incorporated into recipes representing Hawaiian, Korean, Filipino, Japanese and Caucasian cuisines, such as poke, or eaten raw.In the 1930s, G. parvispora began to be commercially harvested in Oahu and would become the most popular seaweed in Honolulu fish markets up until the 1970s. Since then, overharvesting has made this species increasingly rare in the wild; its limited availability led to the importation and mariculture of Atlantic Gracilaria tikvaheae as a replacement, which differs from G. parvispora in taste, texture, and appearance. In 1988, the collection of fertile Gracilaria parvispora, with cystocarps, was outlawed.