A MOLECULAR AND MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE GYMNOGONGRUS DEVONIENSIS (RHODOPHYTA) COMPLEX IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC

Authors: Maggs, C.A., Douglas, S.E., Fenety, J. and Bird, C.J.

Journal: Journal of Phycology

Volume: 28

Issue: 2

Pages: 214-232

eISSN: 1529-8817

ISSN: 0022-3646

DOI: 10.1111/j.0022-3646.1992.00214.x

Abstract:

The Gymnogongrus devoniensis (Greville) Schotter complex in the North Atlantic Ocean was elucidated by comparative molecular, morphological, and culture studies. Restriction fragment length patterns and hybridization data on organellar DNA revealed two distinct taxa in samples from Europe and eastern Canada. Nucleotide sequences for the intergenic spacer between the large and small subunit genes of ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), and the adjoining regions of both genes, differed by 12.5–13.4% between the two taxa. One of the taxa, which included material from the type locality of G. devoniensis at Torbay, Devon, England, was taken to represent authentic G. devoniensis. Within this taxon, samples from Ireland, England, northern France, northern Spain, and southern Portugal showed great morphological variation, particularly in habit, but their Rubisco spacer sequences were identical or differed by only a single nucleotide. Constant morphological features included the development, from a single auxiliary cell, of the spherical cystocarp with a thick mucilage sheath that appears to be typical of Gymnogongrus species with internal cystocarps. Two life‐history types were found. Northern isolates underwent a direct‐type life history, recycling apomictic females by carpospores, whereas the Portuguese isolate followed a heteromorphic life history in which carpospores gave rise to a crustose tetrasporophyte. The second group of samples, from Nova Scotia and Northern Ireland, provisionally referred to as Gymnogongrus sp., showed little morphological variation. The life history in both areas consists of apomictically reproducing diploid female gametophytes and diploid crustose bisporophytes and tetrasporophytes. Rubisco spacer sequences of the samples were identical, and the plasmid previously described in the Nova Scotian samples was also present in the Northern Ireland population. This species is widely distributed in the western Atlantic, from Newfoundland to Massachusetts. In Europe, gametophytes are known only at one site, but crusts are distributed from Denmark, Scotland (and probably Norway) to France. It is very likely that this species was introduced from one side of the North Atlantic to the other by shipping during the early nineteenth century. Several morphological features are unusual within the genus but are shared with G. leptophyllus J. Agardh from the eastern Pacific Ocean, and further work is necessary to determine whether Gymnogongrus sp. and G. leptophyllus are conspecific. Copyright © 1992, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

Source: Scopus

A MOLECULAR AND MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE GYMNOGONGRUS-DEVONIENSIS (RHODOPHYTA) COMPLEX IN THE NORTH-ATLANTIC

Authors: MAGGS, C.A., DOUGLAS, S.E., FENETY, J. and BIRD, C.J.

Journal: JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY

Volume: 28

Issue: 2

Pages: 214-232

ISSN: 0022-3646

DOI: 10.1111/j.0022-3646.1992.00214.x

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

A molecular and morphological analysis of the Gymnogongrus devoniensis (Rhodophyta) complex in the North Atlantic

Authors: MAGGS, C.

Journal: J. Phycol.

Volume: 28

Pages: 214-232

Source: CiNii EN

A molecular and morphological analysis of the Gymnogongrus devoniensis (Rhodophyta) complex in the North Atlantic

Authors: MAGGS, C.

Journal: J. Phycol.

Volume: 28

Pages: 214-232

Source: CiNii JP