This is the sputnik-like zoosporangium of Halophytophthora
spinosa, a warm-water oomycote species limited to the tropics
and subtropics. Variety spinosa is limited to the Atlantic
Ocean, and variety lobata to the Pacific. H. spinosa
is a weak competitor with
Halophytophthora vesicula when there
is a large source of zoospores nearby (e.g., large deposits of
decaying leaves of
red mangroves). When the zoospore
source is weak, for some reason (better persistence in the water
column?), H. spinosa is more frequent in decaying leaves of
mangroves than is H. vesicula. When the zoospores of H.
spinosa are mature, an exit tube will form through which the
zoopospores can swim away. If the sporangium is stranded above the
water line (on a micro scale), the exit tube will grow until it
reaches water into which it can release its zoospores. See Newell SY,
Fell JW, 1997, Competition among mangrove oomycotes, and between oomycotes
and other microbes. Aquat Microb Ecol 12:21-28.