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MORPHOLOGICAL AND GENETIC CHARACTERIZATION OF PHAEOCYSTIS CORDATA AND P. JAHNII (PRYMNESIOPHYCEAE), TWO NEW SPECIES FROM THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
Author(s) -
Zingone Adriana,
ChrétiennotDinet MarieJosèphe,
Lange Martin,
Medlin Linda
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of phycology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1529-8817
pISSN - 0022-3646
DOI - 10.1046/j.1529-8817.1999.3561322.x
Subject(s) - biology , flagellum , ribosomal rna , mediterranean sea , botany , algae , mediterranean climate , bacteria , ecology , gene , genetics
Two new Phaeocystis species recently discovered in the Mediterranean Sea are described using light and electron microscopy, and their systematic position is discussed on the basis of an analysis of their nuclear‐encoded small‐subunit ribosomal RNA gene (SSU rRNA) sequences. Phaeocystis cordata Zingone et Chrétiennot‐Dinet was observed only as flagellated unicells. Cells are heart shaped, with two flagella of slightly unequal length and a short haptonema. The cell body is covered with two layers of thin scales. The outermost layer scales are oval, with a faint radiating pattern, a raised rim, and a modest central knob. The inner‐layer scales are smaller and have a faint radiate pattern and an inflexed rim. Cells swim with their flagella close together, obscuring the haptonema, pushing the cell, and causing it to rotate about its longitudinal axis while moving forward. Phaeocystis jahnii Zingone was isolated as a nonmotile colony. It forms loose aggregates of cells embedded in a mucilaginous, presumably polysaccharide matrix without a definite shape or visible external envelope. The flagellated stage has the features typical of other Phaeocystis species. Cells are rounded in shape and slightly larger than P. cordata. The cell body is covered with extremely thin scales of two different sizes with a very faint radiating pattern toward their margin. Swimming behavior is similar to that of P. cordata, with the flagella in a posterior position as the cells swim. The SSU rRNA sequence analysis indicated that both species are distinct from other cultivated Phaeocystis species sequenced to date. Regions previously identified as specific for the genus Phaeocystis are not found in P. jahnii, and new genus‐specific regions have been identified. P. cordata is more closely related to the colonial species P. globosa, P. antarctica, and P. pouchetii and has branched prior to the divergence of the warm‐water P. globosa species complex from the cold‐water species P. antarctica and P. pouchetii. These results are discussed within a framework ofthe available data on the evolution of the world’s oceans.

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