- Alaria nana desiccating at low tide
- A. nana exposed at low tide
- A. nana at back. Nereocystis in front
- The holdfasts of A. nana attached to barnacles
- A. nana in the foreground
- A. nana fronds at low tide
Photos by Ecoguardian Ryan Murphy
Phylum: Phaeophyta
Class: Phaeophyceae
Order: Laminariales
Family: Alariaceae
Alaria nana (Schrader)
Description: The plant is olive brown to yellowish-brown in colour with a conspicuous blade (eroded at maturity), stipe, and holdfast. The holdfast is made up of short, firm root-like structures and is 3-7 cm. long, 5-8 mm. in diameter, merging into a slightly compressed rachis 2-4 cm. long. The rachis in turn merges into the blade, which is linear, tapering gradually to the apex and abruptly to the rachis; the blade is 40-60 cm. long and 3-8 cm. wide with a conspicuous, solid percurrent midrib 4-6 mm. wide.
Habitat: On rocks in the middle and upper intertidal zones in exposed areas.
Pacific Coast Distribution: Alaska to California.
Robert Scagel, 1972
See all Phaeophytes in the Race Rocks Taxonomy
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