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Service Notice

The Western Australian Herbarium’s collections management system, WAHerb, and DBCA’s flora taxonomic names application, WACensus, have been set to read-only mode since 1 October 2025. Recent taxonomic changes are not currently being reflected in Florabase, herbarium collections, or the census. Due to the rapidly approaching holiday season and associated agency and facility soft closures, along with the substantial work involved in data mapping, cleaning, and verification, the migration to the new collection management software is not expected to occur before 1 March 2026, when a further update will be provided. Please reach out to us if you have any questions or concerns.

The notice period started at 9:45 am on Friday, 12 December 2025 +08:00 and will end at 12:00 pm on Monday, 2 March 2026 +08:00.

Padina okinawaensis Ni-Ni-Win, S.Arai & H.Kawai

Reference
Phycologia 49:142-143, Figs 4-5, 15-20 (2010)
Conservation Code
Not threatened
Naturalised Status
Native to Western Australia
Name Status
Current

Scientific Description

Habit and structure. Thallus erect, yellowish brown, to 7 cm wide and 5 cm tall, pale brown or whitish brown, circular or semicircular, with entire margins, attached by a stupose base with a short stipe, moderately to heavily calcified on the dorsal surface (except at the hairlines), and heavily calcified on the ventral surface, composed of 2 cell layers throughout (60–90 mm thick). Calcified glabrous zones and uncalcified hairlines formed in alternate sequence on the dorsal surface, forming brown stripes or furrows on the whitish brown calcified thallus surface. Ventral thallus surface exhibiting continuous calcification. Cells of the ventral surface layer slightly thicker than those of the dorsal surface layer. Concentric hairlines present on both surfaces, in alternate sequence at equal distance between the two surfaces. Hairlines on the dorsal surface broad and depressed, those on the ventral surface narrow, not depressed and sometimes inconspicuous or rudimentary.

Distribution. Known from southern Thailand, Indonesia, Japan, the Hawaiian Islands and tropical Australia.

Habitat. Grows in association with coral reefs in the subtidal.

[After Huisman & Phillips, Algae of Australia: Mar. Benthic Algae of North-western Australia, 1. Green and Brown Algae 212 (2015)]

John Huisman and Cheryl Parker, 3 August 2021

Distribution

IBRA Regions
Pilbara.
IBRA Subregions
Roebourne.
Local Government Areas (LGAs)
Port Hedland.