MORPHOLOGIAL PLASTICITY OF HALODULE SPECIES IN RESPONSE TO DIFFERENT ENVIRONMENTS

Authors

  • Japar Sidik Bujang Faculty of Agriculture and Food Sciences, Universiti Putra Malaysia
  • Norhapizah Ahmad Nazri Biology Department, Faculty Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia
  • Muta Harah Zakaria Faculty of Agriculture and Food Sciences, Universiti Putra Malaysia
  • Azis Arshad Biology Department, Faculty Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia
  • Hisao Ogawa Faculty of Fisheries, Kitasato University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14203/mri.v33i1.457

Keywords:

Seagrass, Halodule, Habitat characteristics, Morphoplasticity

Abstract

Halodule species is widely distributed along the south and east coasts of Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah and Sarawak. Five locations were selected for the study based on different habitat characteristics; sub-tidal shoal (Merambong-2 sites; Tg. Adang Laut-2 sites), coastal lagoon (Merchang-2 sites), inter-tidal beach front (Lawas-l site) and reef atoll lagoon (Pulau Layang-Layang-l site). Samplings and collections of Halodule plants were conducted from August 2002 until May 2004. The result of the study found that Halodule species are found at depth.of -1.5 to-2.7 m in various habitats with substrates from sandy, coralline sand, calcareous sandy-mud, sandy-mud to muddy substrates and can survive in a wide range of salinity, 18-34 psu. They adapt in th,e different environmental conditions through changes in morphology. Water depth (associated with ambient light), sediment type and sediment depth have an influence on the morphology of vegetative components e.g. leaf length, leaf width, erect stem length and rhizome growth pattern. Leaf tip morphology was not affected by habitat types and the environmental characteristics. Leaf tips for H. uninervis are similar in morphology between young and mature leaves. Leaf tips for H. pinifolia varied with an obvious differences between young and mature leaf tips.

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Published

2026-01-08

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Articles