Here are a few naked (i.e., without leaf
sheaths) stems from the wrackline on Nannygoat
Beach on Sapelo Island. The major decay agent in these stems is Passeriniella obiones. P. obiones
releases purple-red quinonic molecules, one of which is obionin-A, into
the decaying tissue, and thereby gives the stem wrack this colorful tint.
This reddishness is quite common in decaying stems, not surprisingly
considering the predominance of P. obiones over other stem-rotting
ascomycetes. Does this red pigment provide defense against other
ascomycetes? Against shredding invertebrates? No one knows, but
obionin-A has shown toxicity for brine shrimp. See Poch & Gloer, 1989,
Obionin-A: a new polyketide metabolite from the marine fungus
Leptosphaeria obiones, Tetrahedron Letters 30:3483-3486; Newell, 1996, Established and potential
impacts of eukaryotic mycelial decomposers in marine/terrestrial ecotones,
J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 200:187-206; Newell & Porter, 2000, Microbial
secondary production from saltmarsh-grass shoots, and its known and
potential fates, pp. 159-185 in Weinstein & Kreeger, Concepts and
Controversies in Tidal Marsh Ecology, Kluwer.