Structure and Composition of Rhodolith Beds from the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin (NE Brazil, Southwestern Atlantic) Vale, Nicholas F. L. Braga Alarcón, Juan Carlos Non-geniculate coralline read algae Rhodolith beds Maërl Morpho-anatomy ROV Brazilian Northeast continental shelf This study was funded by the CoordenacAo de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES-Finance Code 001) and FundacAo de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro- Jovem Cientista do Nosso Estado (FAPERJ/JCNE-Fellow to Leonardo T. Salgado). Rhodolith beds are biogenic benthic habitats mainly formed by unattached, non-geniculate coralline algae, which can be inhabited by many associated species. The Brazilian continental shelf encompasses the largest continuous rhodolith bed in the world. This study was based on samples obtained from seven sites and videos taken by a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) at four transects off the Sergipe-Alagoas Coast on the northeast Brazilian shelf. ROV operations and bottom trawl sampling revealed the occurrence of rhodolith beds between 25 and 54 m depths. At the shallower depths, fruticose (branching) rhodoliths (maërl) appear in troughs of ripples, and other non-branching rhodoliths occur associated with corals and sponge patches surrounded by bioclastic sand. Rhodoliths also occur in patches from 30 to 39 m depth; some are fused, forming larger, complex tridimensional structures. At deeper depths, from 40 to 54 m, the abundance of rhodoliths increases and occur associated with fleshy macroalgae on a smooth seafloor; some rhodoliths are fused into complex structures, locally some are fruticose (maërl), and others are partially buried by fine-grained sediment. The collected rhodoliths vary from fruticose in two sites to encrusting to lumpy, concentric and boxwork nodules in the rest; their size ranges from small (<1.5 cm) to large (~6 cm) and are mostly sub-spheroidal to spheroidal. A total of 16 red algal morpho-taxa were identified in the study sites. Two phases of growth can be distinguished in some rhodoliths by changes in color. The brownish inner cores yielded ages of 1600–1850 cal years before the present, whereas outer layers were much younger (180–50 years BP old). Growth layers appeared to have been separated by a long period of burial in the seafloor sediment. Other rhodoliths have ages of hundreds of years. 2022-05-09T11:44:42Z 2022-05-09T11:44:42Z 2022-04-10 journal article Vale, N.F.L... [et al.]. Structure and Composition of Rhodolith Beds from the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin (NE Brazil, Southwestern Atlantic). Diversity 2022, 14, 282. [https://doi.org/10.3390/d14040282] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/74756 10.3390/d14040282 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ open access Atribución 3.0 España MDPI