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Genetics and Morphology Characterize the Dinoflagellate Symbiodinium voratum,n. sp., (Dinophyceae) as the Sole Representative of Symbiodinium Clade E
Authors:Hae Jin Jeong  Sung Yeon Lee  Nam Seon Kang  Yeong Du Yoo  An Suk Lim  Moo Joon Lee  Hyung Seop Kim  Wonho Yih  Hiroshi Yamashita  Todd C LaJeunesse
Institution:1. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, College of Natural Sciences, Seoul National University, , Seoul, 151‐747 Korea;2. Department of Oceanography, Kunsan National University, , Kunsan, 573‐701 Korea;3. Seikai National Fisheries Research Institute, Fisheries Research Agency, Fukai‐Ohta, , Ishigaki Okinawa, 907‐0451 Japan;4. Department of Biology, 327 Mueller Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University, , University Park, PA, 16802 USA
Abstract:Dinoflagellates in the genus Symbiodinium are ubiquitous in shallow marine habitats where they commonly exist in symbiosis with cnidarians. Attempts to culture them often retrieve isolates that may not be symbiotic, but instead exist as free‐living species. In particular, cultures of Symbiodinium clade E obtained from temperate environments were recently shown to feed phagotrophically on bacteria and microalgae. Genetic, behavioral, and morphological evidence indicate that strains of clade E obtained from the northwestern, southwestern, and northeastern temperate Pacific Ocean as well as the Mediterranean Sea constitute a single species: Symbiodinium voratum n. sp. Chloroplast ribosomal 23S and mitochondrial cytochrome b nucleotide sequences were the same for all isolates. The D1/D2 domains of nuclear ribosomal DNA were identical among Western Pacific strains, but single nucleotide substitutions differentiated isolates from California (USA) and Spain. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that S. voratum is well‐separated evolutionarily from other Symbiodinium spp. The motile, or mastigote, cells from different cultures were morphologically similar when observed using light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy; and the first complete Kofoidian plate formula for a Symbiodinium sp. was characterized. As the largest of known Symbiodinium spp., the average coccoid cell diameters measured among cultured isolates ranged between 12.2 (± 0.2 SE) and 13.3 (± 0.2 SE) μm. Unique among species in the genus, a high proportion (approximately 10–20%) of cells remain motile in culture during the dark cycle. Although S. voratum occurs on surfaces of various substrates and is potentially common in the plankton of coastal areas, it may be incapable of forming stable mutualistic symbioses.
Keywords:phylogeny  plastid genes  species  systematics  taxonomy
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