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Biodiversity of green algae covering artificial hard substrate surfaces in a suburban environment: a case study using molecular approaches
Author(s) -
Hallmann Christine,
Hoppert Michael,
Mudimu Opayi,
Friedl Thomas
Publication year - 2016
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/jpy.12437
Subject(s) - biology , botany , subaerial , algae , green algae , ecology , cosmopolitan distribution , paleontology
In Middle European suburban environments green algae often cover open surfaces of artificial hard substrates. Microscopy reveals the Apatococcus/Desmococcus morphotype predominant over smaller coccoid forms. Adverse conditions such as limited water availability connected with high PAR and UV irradiance may narrow the algal diversity to a few specialists in these subaerial habitats. We used rRNA gene cloning/sequencing from both DNA extracts of the biofilms without culturing as well as cultures, for the unambiguous determination of the algal composition and to assess the algal diversity more comprehensively. The culture independent approach revealed mainly just two genera ( Apatococcus , Trebouxia ) for all study sites and five molecular operational taxonomic units ( OTU s) for a particular study site, which based on microscopic observation was the one with the highest morphological diversity. The culture approach, however, revealed seven additional OTU s from five genera ( Chloroidium , Coccomyxa , Coenochloris , Pabia , Klebsormidium ) and an unidentified trebouxiophyte lineage for that same site; only two OTU s were shared by both approaches. Two OTU s or species were recovered for which references have been isolated only from Antarctica so far. However, the internal transcribed spacer ( ITS ) sequence differences among them supported they are representing distinct populations of the same species. Within Apatococcus five clearly distinct groups of ITS sequences, each putatively representing a distinct species, were recovered with three or four such ITS types co‐occurring at the same study site. Except for the streptophyte Klebsormidium only members of Trebouxiophyceae were detected suggesting these algae may be particularly well‐adapted to subaerial habitats.

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