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A genetics‐based description of Symbiodinium minutum sp. nov. and S. psygmophilum sp. nov. (Dinophyceae), two dinoflagellates symbiotic with cnidaria
Author(s) -
Lajeunesse Todd C.,
Parkinson John E.,
Reimer James D.
Publication year - 2012
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 - 10.1111/j.1529-8817.2012.01217.x
Subject(s) - symbiodinium , biology , dinophyceae , monophyly , ecology , phylogenetic tree , evolutionary biology , zooxanthellae , anthozoa , clade , symbiosis , coral reef , genetics , gene , phytoplankton , nutrient , bacteria
Traditional approaches for describing species of morphologically cryptic and often unculturable forms of endosymbiotic dinoflagellates are problematic. Two new species in the genus S ymbiodinium Freudenthal 1962 are described using an integrative evolutionary genetics approach: S ymbiodinium minutum sp. nov. are harbored by widespread tropical anemones in the genus A iptasia ; and S ymbiodinium psygmophilum sp. nov. are harbored by subtropical and temperate stony corals (e.g., A strangia, C ladocora, and O culina ) from the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Both new species are readily distinguished from each other by phylogenetic disparity and reciprocal monophyly of several nucleic acid sequences including nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2, single copy microsatellite flanker Sym15, mitochondrial cytochrome b , and the chloroplast 23S rRNA gene. Such molecular evidence, combined with well‐defined differences in cell size, physiology (thermal tolerance), and ecology (host compatibility) establishes these organisms as distinct species. Future descriptions of S ymbiodinium spp. will need to emphasize genetics‐based descriptions because significant morphological overlap in this group obscures large differences in ecology and evolutionary divergence. By using molecular evidence based on conserved and rapidly evolving genes analyzed from a variety of samples, species boundaries are defined under the precepts of Evolutionary and Biological Species Concepts without reliance on an arbitrary genetic distance metric. Because ecological specialization arises through genetic adaptations, the Ecological Species Concept can also serve to delimit many host‐specific Symbiodinium spp.

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