In the Mediterranean, growth begins in April when new stolons develop and erect branches start growing, and continue till December, after which the plants decline and become dormant.
C. racemosa reproduces
vegetatively by fragmentation. When pieces of the plant get broken off they develop into new plants. Small pieces of tissue only a few millimetres across are capable of doing this.
C. racemosa can also reproduce sexually and in so doing exhibits
holocarpy. This means that all the organism's
cytoplasm is used up in the creation of the
gametes and only a husk remains at the site of the original plant. The plants are
monoecious with male and female gametes being produced by the same plant and liberated into the water column where they unite to give spherical
zygotes. These settle and after five weeks produce
germ tubes which elongate and branch to develop into new plants. Mass
spawnings sometimes take place in the
Caribbean Sea and normally do so just before dawn. There were 39 such mass spawnings during a period of 125 days and the days on which they took place showed no relation to the tidal or lunar cycles. The gametes remain motile for about 60 minutes. Mass spawning is advantageous to the plant in increasing the chances of fertilisation. Underwater visibility can be reduced to less than one metre by the green cloud produced in the process. Similar mass spawnings take place in the Mediterranean Sea causing a cloud of green gametes to be released in the water approximately 14 minutes before sunrise. ==Ecology==